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Carbon Monoxide
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - Information from the U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
- Food for thought from authorities about why we should ensure fresh batteries in our home safety devices.
- Healthy Homes are often equipped with Carbon Monoxide (CO) sensors to detect indoor air quality issues related to fuel-burning appliances. Below is information on why you may want to consider also having a NOx filter in tandem with your CO sensor.
- An estimated 2,850 people die and 15,900 people are injured annually because of fires in residences. Although more than 90 percent of homes have smoke alarms, millions of homes have
alarms that do not work. Missing or dead batteries are the main cause for non-working smoke alarms - U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
- When outfitting or decorating your home, there are sensitive choices you can make if you have asthma.
- Training in the whole-house approach to home performance gives contractors the ability to save lives as well as energy.
- Everyone is at risk of being poisoned by carbon monoxide exposure. Older adults with pre-existing conditions, such as chronic heart disease, anemia, or respiratory problems, are even more susceptible to the effects of this odorless, colorless gas.
- EPA\'s Energy Star program now addresses indoor air quality (IAQ). Here is a summary of requirements you can use to improve your home\'s IAQ.
- What is known about tight construction, why it is a good idea, and how it is integral to systematic house design and construction.
- Removing particles and gases using air cleaners.
- From The Healthy House Answer Book: Answers to the 133 most commonly asked questions. Questions 64-71.
- From The Healthy House Answer Book: Answers to the 133 most commonly asked questions.
- From The Healthy House Answer Book: Answers to the 133 most commonly asked questions. Questions 11-21.
- Knowing what hurts indoor air quality, can help you improve it.
- Strategic selection and placement of household plants improves the air you breathe.
- What to do, what not to do.
- What can be done to make our homes and buildings more healthful?
- Looking for information about toxic chemicals and environmental hazards that might be found in your school, home or office building? NIH's National Library of Medicine (NLM) has created a non-technical, easy-to-navigate web site called Tox Town...
- A comprehensive overview of the issues.
- 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.
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