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- With a home energy audit, you can find out where your home is losing energy and find out what you can change to lower your energy bills.
- Many people believe house plants will remove indoor air pollution. But will they?
- EPA has added an indoor air quality component to the already well-known Energy Star program—the Energy Star Indoor Air Package (IAP).
- Households with wells must take special precautions to ensure the protection and maintenance of their drinking water supplies.
- Energy auditors may use thermography -- or infrared scanning -- to detect thermal defects and air leakage in building envelopes.
- The right air purifier may reduce your risk for certain illnesses.
- With the right techniques, you can keep a fresh, indoor supply of culinary savors.
- The key is to understand how to ventilate intelligently to improve health, save on energy, reduce repair bills, and health care costs.
- National Healthy Homes Conference to address serious health and safety concerns in housing.
- The chemicals we're exposed to indoors, how they may affect our health, and what the government is - and perhaps isn't - doing about it.
- John Bower's presentation at the Energy Efficient Building Association, Excellence in Housing Conference, Dallas Texas, February 1994.
- Use the principles of separation, elimination, and ventilation to deal with pollutants originating from any source.
- A comprehensive how-to guide.
- Many commercial mattresses are manufactured using polyurethane, synthetic fabrics, chemical fire retardants, toxic dyes, formaldehyde and stain-resistant chemicals. These chemicals are outgassed over time, and can expose skin and lungs to potentially toxic substances, causing allergic reactions and other health problems.
- How to make your home a healthier place.
- A comprehensive overview of the issues.
- Insulation is needed in warm climates to keep the heat outside and in cold climates to keep the heat inside.
- Q and A with Thad Godish, Ph.D.
- While tap water that meets federal and state standards is generally safe to drink, threats to drinking water are increasing.
- How residential building envelopes can act as particle filters.
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Information provided by The Healthy House Institute is designed to support,
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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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