Is Your Home Toxic? Five Common  Health Dangers in Homes ... and What to Do About Them
by www.SixWise.com
 
Your home is your  safe haven, but it may also be a Petri dish of sorts, growing, emitting and  teeming with a variety of contaminants. These toxins can come from the  environment, from the outdoors, from materials used to build your home and even  from your tap water. But no matter what the source, awareness is the first step  to detoxing your home.
    
        
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 With the tips that follow you  can turn your toxic home into a pure safe haven. | 
    
Here we’ve compiled a  list of some of the most common indoor health toxins, along with the steps you  can take to get rid of them. Fortunately, once you’re armed with the correct  knowledge you’ll be able to take simple steps to make your home a healthy place  for you and your family.
1. Radon in Your Home
Radon  is a radioactive gas that can’t be seen, smelled or tasted and can get into any  type of building. According to the Surgeon General, radon is the number one  cause of lung cancer deaths among non-smokers and the Environmental Protection  Agency (EPA) estimated it to be the cause of 20,000 deaths each year. Plus, if  you are a smoker and live in a home with elevated radon levels you are more  prone to the risk of lung cancer.
Radon Points of Entry 
Radon  comes from the natural breakdown of uranium in soil, rock and water and travels  from the soil to the air and eventually into homes through seven entryways:
All  homes -- old and new, well-sealed or drafty, with or without basements -- are  susceptible to radon problems. Statistics  are showing that nearly  one out of every 15 homes in the U.S. has elevated radon levels. Once it’s trapped inside your home, it builds up and exposes you to health  risks such as lung cancer. This happens when the radon gas begins to decay into  radioactive particles that are inhaled and trapped in your lungs when you  breathe.
After  further breakdown of the particles, small bursts of energy are released that  can cause lung tissue damage and can develop into lung cancer over the course  of your lifetime.
How to Reduce the Radon Levels in  Your Home 
One  of the primary methods of reducing radon in your home is using a vent pipe  system and fan also known as soil suction radon reduction. This works by  pulling the radon from beneath your house and forcing it to vent outside. This  method is much more effective and easy on the pocketbook if you combine it with  sealing the foundation cracks and other openings in the home. You can hire an  experienced radon contractor to make the necessary repairs.
Testing for Radon: The Only Way  to Find Out if You’re at Risk 
The  only surefire way of knowing the radon levels in your home is by having it  tested. Both the EPA and the Surgeon General recommend testing for radon in all  homes below the third floor. The EPA-recommended Home Radon Test Kit  that we offer on Sixwise.com is an extremely easy, do-it-yourself kit that  allows you to accurately test for radon in your home in just three to seven  days.
It  is especially important to have your house tested if you are planning any  remodeling or renovation jobs, particularly to your basement. If you find you  have a radon problem, radon-resistant techniques can be applied as part of your  renovation. Once your work is completed, you should have the radon levels  tested again as the levels can change in your home after major renovations.
2. Radon in Your Water 
A  report released by the National Academy of Sciences that was required by the  Safe Drinking Water Act reviewed the risk of radon in drinking water and  confirmed drinking-water-related cancer deaths, mainly due to radon-induced  lung cancer.
Further,  the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that radon in household water causes  30 to 1,800 deaths every year.
The  two main sources of radon in the home is through indoor air and the water  supply, which puts you at a higher risk as it poses an inhalation and ingestion  risk. Most radon from water is released into the air during shower time and  when using water for other household purposes. If your water comes from a well  such as a private well or a public water supply system that uses ground water  you are at greater risk of radon problems infiltrating your water supply.
Like  radon in your air, because radon is tasteless, odorless and colorless, the only  way to find out if high levels are in your water is with a water test. Fortunately,  you can easily test your water with our top-recommended Radon-in-Water Test Kit.  It includes everything you need to determine your drinking water's safety  including:
All  you need to do is collect the water and ship it, preferably the same day, to  the laboratory for analysis. This test is especially important for those who  get their water from a well.
In  the event you find elevated levels, the CDC reports that radon can be removed  from water by using one of two methods:
It's  important to note that to adequately remove radon, the water must be treated  where it enters your home. Attaching a filter on your tap or under your sink  will only treat a small portion of your water.
3.  Chlorine in Your  Drinking Water and Shower
Tap  water in 42 states is contaminated with more than 140 unregulated chemicals  that lack safety standards, according to an investigation conducted by the  Environmental Working Group.. Despite these findings, public health officials  have not set safety standards for these chemicals and millions of Americans  continue to drink the water every day.
The  study also showed that approximately 240 million Americans drink tap water  contaminated with some level of Chlorination Byproducts (CBPs).  CBPs are created when the disinfectants used to kill bacteria in the U.S. drinking  water supply react with natural organic matter, such as decaying vegetation, or  when certain compounds such as bromide are present in the water.
Health Effects of Chlorination  Byproducts
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    CBPs cause up  to 9,300 cases of bladder cancer deaths each year 
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    CBPs are  linked to miscarriages and birth defects, including neural tube defects, low  birth weight and cleft palate 
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    Exposures to  other cancers such as rectal and colon 
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    Kidney and  spleen disorders 
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    Immune system  problems 
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    Neurotoxic  effects 
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    Weight loss  early in life 
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    Neonatal  jaundice 
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    Increased risk  of having small head size and body length in infants 
There  are two routes of exposure to CBPs: drinking chlorinated tap water and through  showering, bathing or swimming in chlorinated water.
Studies  show that showers and baths may contribute more to your total exposure to  chlorination byproducts than drinking water. When you shower or take a bath,  the warm water opens up your skin's pores, making it like a sponge for  chlorine, and you also absorb the chemicals when you breathe in the steam from  the shower.
In  fact, the steam from your shower can contain up to 100 times the chemicals as  the tap water itself.
    
        
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Meanwhile,  when you drink chlorinated water some of these toxins get filtered by your  kidneys, liver and digestive system. This is not so when you breathe in these  chemical vapors; there is no filtering, just a direct route to your  bloodstream.
Take,  for example, a study published in a 2007 issue of the American Journal of  Epidemiology. The study participants who drank chlorinated water had a 35  percent increased risk of bladder cancer. However, those who spent time  swimming in chlorinated pools had a 57 percent increased risk, and those who  took long showers or baths also had an increased risk of bladder cancer.
According  to some estimates, by taking a hot shower you end up absorbing over 600 percent  more chlorine and other chemicals than you would from drinking the same  un-filtered water all day!
How to Get the Chlorine Out of Your Tap Water and Shower
As the risks exposure to chlorine and chlorination  byproducts from your shower and tap become widely known, it’s essential to know  that you can remove these toxins from the water using high-quality water  filters. But again, be carefulas they do NOT all filter out chlorine.
The two options that Sixwise.com highly recommend come from  Wellness, which produces both The Wellness Shower Filter   and The Wellness Kitchen Water Filter.
The Wellness Kitchen combines the best filtration and  enhancement technologies to deliver the purest and most natural tasting water  available. It effectively reduces harmful contaminants, including chlorine and  THMs, while at the same time enhancing the water with adding important yet  delicate wellness "ions and minerals" that your body needs.
Meanwhile, The Wellness Shower effectively reduces up to 99  percent of chlorine from your shower's water for up to 24 months, which is two  or three times longer than any other shower filtration system available. But  that's not all.
The Wellness Filter concept was developed in the 1980s by  Harusuke Naito, a renowned Japanese sports physiologist and Olympic swimming  coach who wanted to produce "perfect water" for his professional  athletic clients.
Haru believed that even subtle differences in water purity,  surface tension and mineral content could affect body hydration, cellular function,  and athletic performance. After extensive field research and study he began  experimenting with various natural filtering media in an effort to produce the  world's best water.
You owe it to yourself, and your family, to shower in, and  drink, only pure water. To find out more about the Wellness Kitchen Filter      and Shower Filter, you can visit their site now.
4. Dirt and Toxins Tracked Into Your House From Outside 
When  you walk in your home, do you immediately take off your shoes and leave them at  the door or do you walk around the house in them? This is a particularly  important question to ponder if you have small children who play on the floor.  One recent study conducted by researchers at the University of Arizona found  nine different species of bacteria on the bottom of people’s shoes -- bacteria  that can cause stomach, eye and lung infections.
The  below findings give solid reasons to take your shoes off at the front door:
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    Bacteria lives  on your shoes longer than in other places because as you walk you are  constantly picking up more debris and feeding the growth of more bacteria 
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    When tested,  bacteria transferred from shoes to tile floors more than 90 percent of the time 
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    Carpeting  harbors even more bacteria than tile floors 
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    Children under  2 years of age are most susceptible to germs that are tracked into the house as  they play on the floor and put their hands in their mouths on the average of 80  times an hour 
Leave the Bacteria at the Door 
The  quickest way to making sure you’re not tracking bacteria and germs into your  house is to remove your shoes at the door and carry them in your hand to the  closet. Another option is to place a few high-quality mats, like the Waterhog Grand Premier Mats,  strategically around your home (such as in doorways and other highly trafficked  areas), to reduce the amount of dirt and dust that get into your home in the  first place. Once inside, that dirt gets circulated into the air, and you  breathe it in.
You can also throw your gym shoes in the washing machine on  the cold cycle with natural detergent such as Enviro-Rite Laundry Detergent  to kill the bacteria. If the bacterium has already been tracked onto your  carpets, your best bet is to give your carpets a thorough cleaning. At SixWise  we highly recommend Enviro-Rite  Carpet Cleaner PAGE,  which is an excellent vegetable-based cleaning concentrate made with naturally  occurring renewable resources, and containing no petrochemicals or added dyes  or fragrances.
Getting Rid of  Dust, Germs, Viruses, Bacteria and Other Dirt
When you walk around or vacuum, dust particles are stirred  up into the air, and along with them come the slew of potential toxic chemicals  and other unsavory items like rodent waste and insect parts. You may then  breathe in these particles or absorb them through your skin once they settle  back down onto a surface you touch.
Since Americans spend 90 percent of their time indoors,  there's plenty of time to be around this potentially toxic dust. This is  especially concerning if you have small children or infants. Children who crawl  and put their fingers in their mouth can ingest 10 grams of dust per day. And,  since they're smaller than adults and their systems are still developing, they  are at a higher risk from contaminants.
This is why dusting horizontal and other surfaces regularly  is necessary to get dust out of your home -- but an ordinary dust cloth, the  kind that just moves dust around, won't do.
What's the optimum choice for dusting? Hospital-Grade Microfiber Mops,  Dusters, Towels and more,  which are used by leading hospitals and other healthcare organizations. Rather  than just pushing dust around, or worse, stirring it up into the air,  Hospital-Grade microfiber products are made with positively charged  ultramicrofibers that pick up everything in their path -- including dust and  all of its microscopic attachments.
These ultramicrofibers are so small at an astonishing 3  microns that they're even smaller than most bacteria (each cleaning cloth  contains over 300 miles of actual cleaning surface!). They pick up contaminants  either used dry or dampened with water-no harsh cleaners needed.
Choosing Hospital-Grade  Ultramicrofiber Cloths, Mops and Wipes   is by far the smartest choice -- and the most economical since each cloth can  be used over 100 times before being replaced -- for dusting in your home.
Though it's impossible to not have ANY dust in your home, by  using an air purifier and dusting your home regularly with Hosptial-Grade  Microfiber Cloths you will be able to keep dust, and therefore your risk of  related illness, to a minimum.
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5. Indoor Air Pollutants 
Studies have shown that indoor pollutants in our homes can  be greater than the pollution outside. This is linked to everyday activities  such as cooking, heating, cooling, cleaning and redecorating that can trigger  the release and spread of indoor pollutants in the home, along with synthetic  materials in carpets, pressed wood furniture, cleaning products, pesticides and  other toxins. People who spend a lot of time inside the home such as infants,  young children, the elderly and those with chronic illnesses are at greater  risk of developing health problems due to breathing in these indoor air  pollutants.
Five of The Most Common Indoor  Pollutants 
 
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    Animal Dander (minute scales from hair, feathers, or skin) 
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    Dust Mite and Cockroach parts 
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    Fungi (Molds) 
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    Infectious agents (bacteria or viruses) 
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    Pollen 
Where Pollutants Live  in Your Home 
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    Dirty air conditioners 
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    Dirty humidifiers and/or dehumidifiers 
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    Bathroom without vents or windows 
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    Kitchen without vents or windows 
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    Dirty refrigerator drip pans 
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    Laundry room with unvented dryer 
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    Unventilated attic 
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    Carpet on damp basement floor 
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    Bedding 
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    Closet on outside wall 
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    Dirty heating/air conditioning system 
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    Dogs or cats 
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    Water damage (around windows, the roof, or the basement) 
The most common health problems associated with indoor air  pollutants are allergic reactions, which may include the following signs and  symptoms:
You can minimize your risks of indoor air pollution by  purifying your indoor air. The PIONAIR Air Treatment System,  which Sixwise.com highly recommends, uses photocatalysis, which is designed to  oxidize organic odors, germs, and fungi. The PIONAIR technology creates  ultraviolet light rays, safe levels of ozone, and passive negative ions as part  of your air treatment. This is not just any old air filter -- it is an air  purifier that duplicates Nature's own methods of air cleaning and  revitalization.
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 Controlling Dust  Mites
Dust mites are a common allergen, and keeping dust mites down  to a minimum are crucial to people suffering from allergies. Dust mite  infestation grounds are sofas, stuffed chairs, carpets, and bedding. Other  popular areas include open shelves, fabric wallpaper, knickknacks, and venetian  blinds. Dust mites live deep in the carpet and cannot be removed by vacuuming.
Here are some tips for alleviating dust mites in your  home:
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    Wash your bedding every 7-10 days in hot water, as cold  water won’t kill dust mites. 
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    If you are allergic to dust mites, use synthetic or foam  rubber mattress pads and pillows, and plastic mattress covers and stay away  from fuzzy wool blankets, feather or wool-stuffed comforters, and feather  pillows. 
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    Do a thorough cleaning of rooms and closets and vacuum to  remove surface dust. Keep in mind that vacuuming and other cleaning may not  remove all animal dander, dust mite material, and other pollutants. To ensure  you are picking up as much bacteria as possible while cleaning, SixWise.com  recommends using Hospital-Grade  Microfiber Terry Cloths. 
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Recommended Reading
The Five Key Areas of  Illness-Causing Germs & Toxins in Your Home
How Your Endocrine  System is Being Harmed by the Top 5 Home Toxins
The 6 Most Dangerous  Home-Based Causes of Disease and Illness
Sources
Environmental Working  Group December 20, 2005
ABC News June 16,  2008
Brighton Air 
Environmental  Protection Agency: Indoor Air Quality
Environmental  Protection Agency: Radon