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- While a school building should be an ideal place for children to develop, thrive and learn, recent studies have found that poor indoor air quality (IAQ) is affecting children's health and their ability to learn.
- Pure, clean water. That's what the ads say. But what does the lab say?
- Natural ventilation is becoming an increasingly attractive method for reducing energy costs while improving indoor air quality, according to green building advocates.
- Households with wells must take special precautions to ensure the protection and maintenance of their drinking water supplies.
- How to fix them.
- Hot tubs can be a bridge for bettering relations with those who matter.
- Good water is good for your home and appliances, too. A 2009 study commissioned by the Water Quality Research Foundation (WQRF) and conducted by the Battelle Memorial Institute found that adding a water softener helps water heaters and major appliances operate as efficiently as possible, while preventing clogs in showerheads, faucets, and drains.
- Caring - and training - has a lot to do with cleaning for health, as this profile of Grogan Clean Care, LLC, Nacogdoches, TX, shows.
- Your drinking water comes from surface water or ground water. Water utilities treat nearly 34 billion gallons of water every day. The amount and type of treatment applied varies with the source and quality of the water.
- Phoenixville business owner sentenced for using improper practices to remove asbestos at homes and businesses.
- A new study by researchers at Brigham Young University and Harvard School of Public Health shows that average life expectancy in 51 U.S. cities increased nearly three years over recent decades, and approximately five months of that increase came thanks to cleaner air.
- Deciding exactly where you will build your healthy house is one of the first decisions that must be made.
- Air filters can definitely improve the air quality in your house, but the big questions are “How much?” and “Is it enough?”
- LEED homes offer many benefits to home owners, including lower energy and water bills; reduced greenhouse gas emissions; increased comfort, less exposure to indoor pollutants such as mold, mildew and other indoor toxins, and lower maintenance costs.
- Design and planting principles.
- The new standard works harder to protect indoor air quality.
- One of the most important ideas to emerge in recent years is the concept that a house is much more than an assemblage of materials. Instead, building scientists and researchers now view a house as an interactive system.
- The term “Zero VOC” on product labelling – a designation historically used for paint and adhesives, but now finding its way onto cleaning products – is often a misnomer.
- There are a number of flooring alternatives for your home that feature environmentally friendly attributes without sacrificing style.
- This report, provided by the Carpet and Rug Institute, showed that when equal amounts of test dust (ISO Fine Test Dust 12103-1, A2) were present on hard versus carpeted flooring, there was less dust driven airborne by the carpeted surface. See also the sidebar and the topics, "The Clean Trust Comments" and "Another Viewpoint on Carpet" and the sidebar, "Soiled Carpet Affects Indoor Air Quality".
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Information provided by The Healthy House Institute is designed to support,
not to replace the relationship between patient/physician or other qualified
healthcare provider.
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We do not strictly control Google ad content. If you believe any Google ad is inappropriate, please email us directly here.
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