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Toxic Chemicals
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - For someone wishing to pursue the known, documented health effects of various materials, a Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) is the best place to start.
- 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.
- Are plastics melting in your meal?
- How can one tell whether one’s symptoms or health problems have been caused by exposure to formaldehyde?
- John Bower\'s advice on building healthy homes.
- Depending on a person's genetic makeup, immune system and tolerance levels, as-well-as the level of toxicity and time of exposure, a person can become chemically sensitive and begin to experience signs of deteriorating health.
- This scientific report shows that, fortunately, many of the interventions to reduce asthma triggers in home environments are relatively simple.
- Chemicals not listed on product labels due to weak regulatory standards.
- A guide to specifications for healthy construction.
- Chemists are creating a new generation of laundry detergents that work well in cold water, save energy, and have healthier ingredients.
- Dry-cleaning chemicals are often intolerable to chemically sensitive people and to some allergic and asthmatic people.
- 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.
- Biomonitoring, the measurement of chemicals in blood, urine, and other tissues or fluids, is becoming an increasingly common tool in the study of human exposure to environmental chemicals; the problem is, it\'s hard to connect with health outcomes (abstract only).
- Searchable databases on chemical toxicity and exposure data are now available for scientists and the public.
- How to reduce your exposure to this common chemical.
- Formaldehyde is an important industrial chemical used to make other chemicals, building materials, and household products. Here\'s how to limit your exposure.
- Yes and no.
- If we still rode horses every day, we’d never have a barn attached to the house because the animal odors would be objectionable. Yet houses routinely have an attached garage which contains much more unhealthy odors.
- Armed with this information, you can protect yourself, your children, and your pets from harmful pesticides.
- The laws protecting citizens from potentially dangerous cleaning and personal-care products remain absent, minimal, or rarely enforced.
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