The air you breathe when you are outside is getting better; however,
the stuff you are breathing at home and in the office is getting
worse. At least according to recent studies by the EPA, which have
found that indoor air quality is two to five times more polluted
than outside air. Most people spend more time indoors than out.
Actually, the EPA says that Americans spend at least 90% of their
time indoors.
Unless, of course, they have dogs, as I do. Then you spend the
majority of your time wandering outside with dog debating whether
or not it has finished so you can go back to the bed,
chair or couch.
The reason for declining indoor air quality is that we are tightening
up our buildings to make them more energy efficient. In doing that,
we trap in chemicals such as formaldehyde, which can be found in
particle-board, insulating foam, and plastic-laminate counters.
Other sources of chemicals are dishwashers, washing machines and
showers, anything that can heat up and spray water. Some wall-to-wall
carpet has adhesives and backings that release 4-phenylcyclohexene.
This is the chemical that gives it that new carpet smell.
There are, however, EPA brand-certified carpets.
What is the solution? Is there a magic potion? How can we all be
healthy and have a clean environment? Is it even possible?
First you clean up your plants, making them energy efficient and
pollution free. You help clean up the outside air and water.
Next, you make your home energy efficient and suddenly you find
out you are poisoning yourself. Is it the manufacturers fault
for not making more healthy products? Was EPA too gung-ho
in discovering and identifying these hazards? Are they
really that dangerous? Or is it our fault for buying the products?
Were there warning labels? It seems we are constantly threatened
by a newly discovered hazard every week. Even scented candles are
now considered hazardous because the wicks may have lead in them.
I agree that buildings can have poor air quality because of poor
ventilation, new carpets, formaldehyde, etc., but how much "hazardous
warning" is too much? Will people start to ignore them?
Im waiting for them to tell me it is hazardous to walk my
dogs in the woods at 3:00 a.m. wearing my husbands ancient
gym shoes and ratty old T-shirt.Then I can make him walk them. Good
thing I use a flashlight instead of a candle.