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AirSort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - A preventive, systematic approach to health, safety and comfort is a homeowner’s best defense against poor air quality, unexpected breakdowns and expensive repairs.
- What to do, what not to do.
- What can be done to make our homes and buildings more healthful?
- California targets devices that emit ozone, a gas known to create and exacerbate respiratory problems.
- Sniffing out the facts about product fragrances.
- Cleaning the house can be a chore, but does it have to be a headache?
- Is your family and home prepared for a disaster?
- Exposure to radon gas increases your risk of developing lung cancer. Here's how to test your home for radon and what to do if you have high radon levels indoors.
- The American Lung Association® Health House® provides tips about selection and use of furnace filters to help ensure better indoor air quality.
- In the U.S. today we're far more likely to breathe some of the most debilitating compounds at home. How did things get this bad? A historical perspective.
- How to reduce your exposure to this common chemical.
- National Center for Healthy Housing releases information from asthma study.
- Formaldehyde is an important industrial chemical used to make other chemicals, building materials, and household products. Here's how to limit your exposure.
- Rather than leaving ventilation to chance, these systems exchange stale air for fresh air in your home, while helping to maintain indoor climate control.
- Location, preventive measures and proper working conditions are essential for a safe and healthy home workshop.
- Web site allows consumers to calculate how their personal energy use contributes to greenhouse gas emissions, air pollution.
- Yes and no.
- Many persons find that, for them, the easiest and most efficient home vacuums are central vacuum systems.
- Dry-cleaning chemicals are often intolerable to chemically sensitive people and to some allergic and asthmatic people.
- With energy prices skyrocketing and the temperature continuing to spike, most homeowners dread receiving their energy bill in the height of summer. But what most homeowners don’t realize is that they could own a high performance home that requires much less energy.

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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