| A Clean Home is a Green Home
by Scott Morris
The National Research Council estimates
that about 15% of the US population experiences environmental
illness and hypersensitivity to toxic materials and chemicals. The
National Academy of Sciences expects this to rise to 60% by 2010.
When you consider that a quarter of a million new chemical
substances are created each year, and that worldwide use of
pesticides has exploded from 2.8 million tons in 1972 to 11.4
million tons in 1980 to 46 million tons in 1990, the Academy's
estimates don't seem all that farfetched. Research has shown that
most people's daily exposures to volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
and pesticides are far greater indoors than outdoors, even in
communities where chemical processing plants are located. Industrial
emissions tend to dissipate into the large sky, while the chemicals
we bring into our homes and work places become much more
concentrated in the closed-in spaces where we spend most of our
time.
Some sources of exposure are obvious, like the various household
chemicals we have stored in our bathrooms and garages, or the
pesticides on the foods we eat. We breathe in other toxic chemicals,
such as formaldehyde, from the outgassing at room temperature of all
sorts of household materials, including building boards, wood and
carpeting adhesives, furniture, synthetic carpets, insulation, and
bedding, among others.
Still others we bring into our homes from outside in the form of
contaminated dust particles. Indoors, these chemicals often persist
much longer than they would outside, where they would be exposed to
the elements that help break them down.
One of the most immediate courses of action each of us can take
to limit our exposure to toxins is to focus on the indoor spaces
where we spend the majority of our time. The following suggestions
focus on what we can do at home or at the work place.
Keep Dust to a MinimumDust is a primary agent for many
toxins in the home. Children and infants are especially vulnerable
as they go through critical early development. Moreover, they
typically ingest five times more dust than adults - 100 milligrams a
day - by rolling around on carpets and sticking their fingers and
toys in their mouths.
Urban infants typically ingest 110 nanograms of very toxic
benzo(a)pyrene - equivalent to smoking three cigarettes daily. House
dust also exposes children to cadmium, lead, and other heavy metals,
as well as polychlorinated biphenyls and other persistent organic
contaminants. What can you do?
- Take your shoes off, and leave them at the door. Using
a commercial-grade doormat can reduce the amount of lead in a
typical carpet by a factor of six. Some pesticides can persist for
decades in carpets, where sunlight and bacteria cannot reach to
break them down. Researchers from the University of Southern
California found DDT in the carpets of 90 of the 362 Midwestern
homes they studied, 20 years after DDT was banned.
- Bare floors are best, rather than wall-to-wall carpets,
which trap a lot of dust. Or consider using large area rugs made
from natural fibers that don't outgas toxic chemicals or require
the use of toxic adhesives.
- If you do use wall-to-wall carpet, tack-strip instead of
gluing the carpet.It will be easier to remove and recycle, and
there will be no glue to outgas.
- Most vacuums only remove larger dust particles, while kicking
up the finer particles. Open doors and windows when you
vacuum, and send children and pets out of the room.
- Avoid indoor pesticides. Even when used as directed,
these chemicals can circulate in dust particles well beyond safe
levels for weeks after application.
Improve Ventilation
- House plants in every room absorb many of the toxic
gases that a modern home traps inside. Spider plants,
philodendron, and golden pothos have been shown by NASA research
to absorb as much as 80% of formaldehyde in a room in 24 hours.
- Improve the ventilation of your kitchen, bathrooms with
showers, and your laundry room. Most people's highest daily
exposures to chloroform (a carcinogen in animals) is from water
vapor from hot showers, boiling water, and washing machines.
- Ionizing air filters can remove particles as small as
0.1 microns, but the cheaper models tend to emit ozone and
electromagnetic fields.
- Ban smoking indoors. Our biggest exposure to the
carcinogen benzene, a VOC, comes from indoor cigarette smoke,
despite the fact that automobile exhaust constitutes 82% of
benzene emissions.
Clean and GreenMost household cleaning can be done with a
squirt bottle of 50/50 vinegar and water, or with some liquid soap
and baking soda, writes Debra Lynn Dadd in her book, Home Safe
Home. Here are some other ideas:
- Use baking soda and hot water for basin, tub, and tile
cleaners.
- For drain cleaners, use baking soda and vinegar or
trisodium phosphate (TSP) with salt; or use hydrogen peroxide and
a plunger for serious clogs.
- For hand dish washing, use a plain liquid soap, such as
Dr. Bronner's, or rub your sponge with bar soap, and slice a fresh
lemon in the dishwater. For automatic dishwashers, use
equal parts baking soda and borax.
- Use about a cup of baking soda, white vinegar, or borax for
laundry detergent.
- Use sodium hexametaphosphate instead of chlorine bleach. (~)
Positive Futures Network P.O. Box 10818, Bainbridge Island,
WA. Reprinted with permission.
© 2007 Green Home, Inc. |