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- Your choice of cabinet materials may affect your breathing space for years to come.
- How residential building envelopes can act as particle filters.
- An energy mortgage increases a consumer’s buying power.
- Viewing the whole house as an integrated system helps.
- From The Healthy House Answer Book: Answers to the 133 most commonly asked questions. Questions 11-21.
- Healthier ways to bed down.
- Tips for safer fiberglass handling and insulation practices.
- Home interventions to reduce asthma triggers can curb soaring health care costs and improve health outcomes.
- An overview of how to make your lifestyle greener and more sustainable by conserving resources and energy, and protecting indoor air quality.
- How well do they clean the air?
- With the ill effects of poor indoor air quality often in the news these days, it pays to
design and build a house that’s healthy from the start.
- The key is to understand how to ventilate intelligently to improve health, save on energy, reduce repair bills, and health care costs.
- The FDA provides comprehensive advice about sunscreens.
- If not properly installed, maintained and operated, air duct components may become contaminated with particles of dust, pollen or other debris.
- The homeowner gains a finished, insulated
basement, a healthy house, and an estimated
energy savings of a whopping 81%.
- Besides holding up the house, a foundation is also a connection between the soil and living space. How this connection is made is important for the health of the occupants and the durability of the house.
- Location, preventive measures and proper working conditions are essential for a safe and healthy home workshop.
- Although scientists have postulated a wide range of adverse human health effects of exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), the nexus of the debate is the concern that prenatal and childhood exposure to EDCs may be responsible for a variety of abnormalities in human sexuality, gender development and behaviors, reproductive capabilities, and sex ratios.
- How to make homes tight and ventilate right.
- Health and environmental factors associated with carpet include indoor air quality, chemical emissions from manufacturing and disposal operations, and solid waste impacts.
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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.
Education Partners
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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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