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Getting The Best Home Air Quality For Your Family

from:


Your home air quality is very important for your health and quality of life. Your home needs to be safe and comfortable, not a place to make you sick. It does not matter if your home is new or old; any age of home can have home air quality problems. Nonetheless, there is good news! You can do something about your home air quality, now! You can improve your home air quality and improve your quality of life.

First, investigate each room to find the air quality problems.

Contributors to poor home air quality include, but are not limited to the carpet, too much or not enough humidity, indoor pesticides, biological pollutants, asbestos, radon, mold, mildew and carbon monoxide.

The kitchen often has problems with moisture that causes mold, mildew and odors, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, particulates, formaldehyde, and inhalable chemicals.

The living room can have problems with, formaldehyde from new carpets, dust mold, pet dander and other allergens from old carpets, lead, Volatile Organic Compounds or VOCs and particulate matter from candles and incense, and the carpet, curtains, drapes and furniture can hold toxic chemicals and gas from smoking.

Common home air quality concerns in the bathroom include mold and mildew, hygiene, air freshening products release toxic chemicals, and potentially dangerous and toxic cleaning chemicals may be stored in the bathroom.

The garage may have home air quality contributors such as, vehicle exhaust gasses, leaking fuel storage containers and improperly stored pesticides and used, old paint cans releasing toxins and VOCs.

The basement can have some of the widest range of contributing factors. Basement factors may include carbon monoxide from furnaces, particulate matter like dust and soot from wood burning stoves, VOCs from used paint and solvents, radon and mold, mildew, many other allergens and biological contaminants.

As you can see, there is a multitude of factors contributing to poor home air quality. Many of these can be limited or even eliminated with the use or air filters and purifiers. There are other ways to improve your home air quality too. The easiest and best way is to just not store the chemicals that cause or contribute a majority of the problems inside your home. It is as important if not considerably more to be aware of your home air quality, as it is to be aware of the outdoor air quality you are in daily.

After you have investigated and discovered the air quality problems inside of your home you will be better prepared to go out and to purchase the tools and supplies you need to improve your home air quality.


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Air monitoring study shows increase of Volatile Organic Compounds in Delaware City - Middletown Transcript


Air monitoring study shows increase of Volatile Organic Compounds in Delaware City
Middletown Transcript
The Independent Air Monitoring Project conducted by the Delaware City Environmental Coalition and Batta Environmental Associates compares the air quality before and after the Delaware City Refinery's restart. “Our main finding in the post-monitoring ...

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Kansas State University issued the following news release: - Water World


Kansas State University issued the following news release:
Water World
The team was awarded a three-year, $556774 grant from the National Science Foundation in September 2011 to complete the research. The team's project was motivated by newly found connections between atmospheric deposition and water quality.

and more »

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Professor to study effects of energy-efficiency measures on indoor air quality - Appalachian State University


Professor to study effects of energy-efficiency measures on indoor air quality
Appalachian State University
But do these measures affect indoor air quality? That's what a team from Appalachian State University plans to find out. Dr. Susan C. Doll, an assistant professor in building science program in the Department of Technology and Environmental Design, ...

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NOAA, Partners Kick Off Multi-state Study of How Thunderstorms Affect Upper ... - eNews Park Forest


NOAA

NOAA, Partners Kick Off Multi-state Study of How Thunderstorms Affect Upper ...
eNews Park Forest
(Credit: NOAA) Today marks the beginning of a large-scale, comprehensive field project to measure how thunderstorms transport, produce and process chemicals that form ozone, a greenhouse gas that affects Earth's climate, air quality and weather ...
Research Associateenvironmentalresearchweb

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Reducing the carbon hoofprint - Agri-View


Reducing the carbon hoofprint
Agri-View
While agricultural sources of air emissions were once exempt from regulation, states like California now have dairies under their radar. Frank Mitloehner, Ph.D., associate professor and air quality extension specialist at the University of ...

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