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Carbon Monoxide
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - What to do, what not to do.
- All green building programs require mechanical ventilation individually designed for each house.
- A healthy house needs balanced airflow.
- Not all devices are the same. The American Lung Association offers advice and sources.
- Death and illness from carbon monoxide poisoning are preventable.
- Home Safety includes preventing unintentional injuries, which include poisoning, fires and burns, choking, drowning, suffocation, strangulation, firearms and falls, and they are all preventable.
- 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.
- By incorporating green remodeling practices, homeowners can avoid serious health issues linked to unhealthy indoor air.
- From The Healthy House Answer Book: Answers to the 133 most commonly asked questions. Questions 11-21.
- Knowing what hurts indoor air quality, can help you improve it.
- From The Healthy House Answer Book: Answers to the 133 most commonly asked questions. Questions 64-71.
- Be in the know to keep carbon monoxide in your home to a minimum.
- Strategic selection and placement of household plants improves the air you breathe.
- The chemicals we\'re exposed to indoors, how they may affect our health, and what the government is - and perhaps isn\'t - doing about it.
- A comprehensive overview of the issues.
- There are several ways to improve the air quality indoors—but all the solutions ideally should to be coupled with better ventilation.
- When outfitting or decorating your home, there are sensitive choices you can make if you have asthma.
- Everyone is at risk of being poisoned by carbon monoxide exposure. Older adults with pre-existing conditions, such as chronic heart disease, anemia, or respiratory problems, are even more susceptible to the effects of this odorless, colorless gas.
- What can be done to make our homes and buildings more healthful?
- What is known about tight construction, why it is a good idea, and how it is integral to systematic house design and construction.
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