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Child Safety
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - U-M Trauma Burn Center reveals how to prevent cooking fires and burn injuries.
- Initial research points to these essential oils — found in some lotions, soaps and other personal care products — as a cause of rare disorder.
- The organic food market slows amid recession, consumer doubt.
- Label and lock up common household products to prevent poisoning
- What can be done to make our homes and buildings more healthful?
- If you suspect your home has lead paint, there are steps you can take to reduce the risk.
- Brush up on the health hazards of household lead and what to do about it.
- Our children may be exposed to pesticides from residues found in their food. Here are ways you can reduce the risk of pesticide residues in your child’s diet.
- One of the greatest difficulties in estimating the toxicity of household products is the fact that most of the ingredients are not disclosed on product labels or other documents.
- While many people enjoy wearing perfumes and using scented products, there is a growing outcry from some people who claim exposure to certain fragrances, including perfumes and scented products, adversely impacts their health.
- National Center for Healthy Housing releases information from asthma study.
- Ingredients in common household cleaning products may be harmful to our health.
- Specialty glass work helps make a house a home with very little impact on your family's health.
- Spring is in the air, and so are dust, pollen and other unwanted particles that can impact health and the dusting you need to do. What is the best way to Spring Clean Your Indoor Air?
- The majority of U.S. families (67 percent) live in a home with at least one major health risk.
- The FDA provides comprehensive advice about sunscreens.
- A major study published in Human Reproduction (January 2009), a European reproductive medicine journal, has found that pregnant women and women of child-bearing age in the United States are at greater risk than previously thought for infertility and reproductive problems as result of exposure to the toxic Teflon chemical PFOA (perfluorooctanoic acid).
- While green products are on the rise, consumers must be wary of misleading "green" claims.
- Or maybe hairspray, air freshener or glue?
- 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.
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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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