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Cleaning Tips
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - Excerpt from Modern Cleaning: The Evolution of Chemical Free Cleaning, by Janice and Tom Stewart © 2011
- Cleaning and maintaining your car using less harmful alternatives.
- Cleaning activities may be associated with increased lower respiratory tract symptoms in women with asthma.
- Tips to help you keep triggers at bay.
- Tips for cleaning dishes, pots and pans.
- The longer mold grows, the greater the potential hazard and the harder it is to control.
- Most dry-cleaning chemicals pose health hazards and are often intolerable to the chemically sensitive and to some allergic and asthmatic people.
- There are five general principles of cleaning up - or remediating - mold.
- Room-by-room green cleaning and sustainable living tips for men (and women too).
- Clean Frequently. Cleaning is an effective health maintenance strategy, and a very cost effective one at that. It\'s true! A clean home is a healthy home.
- Green Seal has developed the GS-49 standard to define environmental performance criteria for residential cleaning services.
- Infrared (IR) cameras, like infrared thermometers, are used to detect surface temperature differences in your home. Here's how they help Clean Trust-Certified experts ensure your home is dry after a flood or other water intrusion.
- How the workings of a vacuum affect how well it cleans and the health of your home.
- Tips for laundering effectively.
- Use baking soda to soften your laundry water.
- Killing mold and mildew doesn't have to kill you too. There are less-toxic treatments you can even make on your own.
- If you suspect your home has lead paint, there are steps you can take to reduce the risk.
- How to get those bothersome "new clothing" odors and chemicals out of your clothes.
- National Center for Healthy Housing releases information from asthma study.
- Research suggests that the addition of ultraviolet light to the brushing and suction of a vacuum cleaner can almost double the removal of potentially infectious microorganisms from a carpet’s surface when compared to vacuuming alone. Researchers say the findings suggest that incorporating the germicidal properties of UV light into vacuuming might have promise in reducing allergens and pathogens from carpets, as well.
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