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Healthy Home
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - Designing healthy homes for the elderly.
- Understanding the physics of indoor air movement for a healthier home.
- What is known about tight construction, why it is a good idea, and how it is integral to systematic house design and construction.
- Most people have heard that tight houses cause indoor air pollution. Actually, this represents a simplistic view of the problem. Tight construction is, in reality, part of the solution. This article explains why.
- Going green may be easier than you think.
- Help for cleaning green from Sierra Club Green Home.
- What you need to know about LEED for Homes.
- 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 University of Washington study of top-selling laundry products and air fresheners found the products emitted dozens of different chemicals. All six products tested gave off at least one chemical regulated as toxic or hazardous under federal laws, but none of those chemicals was listed on the product labels.
- Lower in-home temperatures could have serious health implications for the elderly, including hypothermia and other indoor health risks.
- Removing particles and gases using air cleaners.
- Understanding what various ventilation-related terms mean.
- Universal design strives to be a broad-spectrum solution that helps everyone, not just people with disabilities.
- The vision that drives universal design is functionality and caring.
- These are improvements you can make right now. Some may add years of usability and safety to your home.
- Can your house breathe?
- Adapted from The Healthy House Answer Book: Answers to the 133 Most Commonly Asked Questions. Questions 72-80.
- Cost-effective fan and ventilation systems help energy-efficient homes stay healthy.
- Vinyl flooring can certainly outgas (emit) potentially bothersome chemical odors and VOCs, but it also offers a relatively impenetrable, smooth surface—one that’s water-resistant, unable to harbor dust mites, pollen grains, and mold spores, and one that’s easy to sweep and wash clean.
- Volatile organic compounds, or VOCs, are common indoor air pollutants. Being volatile, they evaporate easily, and being organic, they contain carbon.
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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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