Choose one topic: -Indoor air quality -Asthma & allergies -Mold & moisture -Carbon monoxide -Lead? -Drinking water -Hazardous household products -Pesticides -Home safety Purpose
Choose one topic:
-Indoor air quality
-Asthma & allergies
-Mold & moisture
-Carbon monoxide
-Lead
-Drinking water
-Hazardous household products
-Pesticides
-Home safety
Purpose
To distill information into main points. To find and evaluate solutions for real-world problems.
Tasks
You will be assigned to one of the topics regarding healthy homes. You will create a presentation.
Create a presentation of 4 slides. The slides will contain the following information:
Title slide: health homes topic
5 main points about the topic
Primary Prevention: what can you do to prevent this problem in your home?
Consider as a homeowner and as a renter
Include approximate costs
Tertiary prevention: once you have this problem, what can you do to eliminate its effects?
Consider as a homeowner and as a renter
Include approximate costs
,
Help Yourself to a Healthy Home
Table of Contents
? You want to take good care of your family. You try to eat healthy foods. You take your
children to the doctor for regular checkups. You try your best to protect your family
from accidents and illness. You want to live in a safe neighborhood and home.
But did you know your home might have hidden dangers to your children’s health? Ask yourself:
• Is the air in your home clean and healthy? • Do your children have breathing problems, like asthma? • Is someone in your home allergic to mold? • Do you know the signs of carbon monoxide poisoning? • Is there lead anywhere in your home? • Is your tap water safe to drink? • Do you have household products with chemicals in them that can make you sick? • Do you use bug spray or other products to keep away pests? • Do you keep poisons where your children can reach them?
The answers to questions like these will help you learn if your home is safe and healthy. This booklet will make it easier to answer these and other important questions about your home and how you live in it. It will also give you ideas about how to protect your children’s health. It is up to you to make sure your home is a healthy home, but there are lots of places to go for help.
Introduction 2-5
Indoor Air Quality 6-10
Asthma & Allergies 11-16
Mold & Moisture 17-22
Carbon Monoxide 23-28
Lead 29-32
Drinking Water 33-37
Hazardous Household Products 38-41
Pesticides 42-47
Home Safety ……………………………… 48-54
Index ……………………………………………. 55
FACT
Some of the most serious health problems for children may start at home. This
booklet explains some of these health concerns and what you can do about them.
Indoor Air Quality
Asthma & Allergies
-2-
Allergies and asthma are health problems that
have a lot to do with the air you breathe. You
and your children spend a lot of time at home,
so the air inside needs to be clean. Does
someone you live with smoke? Do you have
pets? Is your basement damp? These may cause
or add to breathing problems. To learn more
about asthma and allergies, see page 11.
Mold & Moisture
Other health and safety problems may come
from the air in your home too. Too much
dampness causes mold to grow. Some mold
is very harmful and some can make allergies
or asthma worse. See page 17 to find out more
about mold.
Why Should You Be Concerned?
Is the air in your home healthy? The air
inside can be more harmful to your family’s
health than the air outdoors. Air can be
unhealthy if it has too many pollutants. Indoor
air pollutants can be lots of things—from oven
cleaner to cigarette smoke to mold. It is not
always easy to tell if your home has unhealthy
air. You may notice bad smells or see smoke, but
you cannot see or smell other dangers, like carbon
monoxide or radon. This chapter will help you
learn if your home has healthy air. See page 6.
The number of children with asthma has doubled in the past 10 years.
1 in 15 children under 18 years of age has asthma.
FACTMost people spend over 90% of their time indoors.
-3-
If they are not working right, ovens and heaters
may cause a deadly gas called carbon monoxide
to build up inside your home. You cannot see or
smell this danger, but you can help keep your
loved ones safe from carbon monoxide poison-
ing. See page 23 to learn more about how to protect
your family from carbon monoxide.
Carbon Monoxide
Is your drinking water safe? Do you know
where your drinking water comes from? If it
comes from your own well, you need to make
sure it is safe to drink. Have your water tested
every year to make sure it does not have chemi-
cals or other pollutants in it that can make your
family sick. There are things you can do to take
care of your well and keep the water clean. See
page 35 for ideas.
You may get your drinking water from a
water company or utility. They always test the
water before they pipe it to you to make sure it
is safe. You can ask the company or utility for
a report on what the tests found. Even if it is
o.k. at the water utility, water can still become
unsafe after it comes into your home. Look at
page 33 to see if your water is safe to drink.
Drinking Water
FACT95% of people living in rural areas use private wells for their
drinking water.
Lead
FACT1 in 40 American children has too much lead in his/her body.
Can your children be poisoned by lead in your
home? Some house paint and water pipes con-
tain lead. This metal can poison your children.
Most problems with lead come from old paint or
lead dust. Lead was also in gasoline and got into
the soil and air from car exhaust. It’s not used in
these ways any more. There’s still plenty of lead
around though.
Lead can poison your children if they get it
into their mouths or breathe it in from the air.
If a pregnant woman gets lead in her body, it
can harm her unborn baby.
Lead poisoning can be a serious problem for
young children. It can cause problems with learn-
ing, growth, and behavior that last a lifetime.
Even small amounts of lead can harm children.
Turn to page 29 to find out about lead poisoning in
your home.
What harmful products do you have in your
home? Some products can harm your family’s
health if you do not use them in the right way.
Common chemicals like bleach, rat poison,
paint strippers, and drain cleaners can be
dangerous. Children can poison themselves
if they get into products like these. Even very
small amounts of some chemicals can cause
health problems if you touch them or breathe
them in. Remember—if you spray or pump
something, it goes right into the air. When
you and your family breathe, those chemicals
go into your bodies. See page 38 to learn more
about how to use, store, and dispose of household
products.
Do you use pesticides in your home? Almost
every household uses pesticides. Bug spray, flea
powder, rat poison, and garden weed killer are
all types of pesticides. They have chemicals in
them that kill pests. This also means they may
harm you and your family. If you do not use
them safely, some pesticides may cause seri-
ous health problems—poisoning, birth defects,
nerve damage, and even cancer.
Your children can come into contact with
pesticides in many ways. You can take simple
steps to protect them from pesticides. See page
42 to see if you are using pesticides safely!
-4-
Did you know that your chances of getting
hurt at home are much higher than they are
at work or school? The leading causes of death
in the home are falls, drowning, fires, poi-
soning, suffocation, choking, and guns. Very
young children and older adults are the people
most likely to get hurt at home. It’s important
to keep people’s age in mind when thinking
about home safety.
Look at page 48 to find out if your home is a
safe place to live and how to make it even safer.
Hazardous Household Products
Pesticides
Home Safety
FACTThousands of children die each year from chemicals stored and used
improperly in the home.
FACTNearly one-half of households with a child under age five had pesticides
stored within reach of children.
FACTEach year, accidents in the home hurt over six and a half
million people.
-5-
Everyone needs a healthy home. But there are
special reasons to think about children:
• Children’s bodies are still growing. Their
young brains, livers, and other organs are
more likely to be harmed by chemicals
and other dangers than those of adults. If
children get sick, it may be harder for them
to get well because their immune systems
are still developing.
• For their size, children eat more food,
drink more water, and breathe more air
than adults do. When they get lead in
their bodies or breathe in harmful gases,
they get a bigger dose than adults would.
• Children play and crawl on the ground.
That means they are closer to many things
that might cause health problems, like
dust and chemicals. Babies and young
children also put most everything in their
mouths—things that might have chemicals
or lead dust on them. Children depend on adults to make
their homes safe!
Why Focus on Children?
How to use this booklet…
T his booklet asks questions about your home and how you live in it. By answering
them, you can find out if your home is healthy or if you need to make some changes.
There are nine chapters in this booklet. Every chapter gives information about a topic,
asks questions about it, and gives you simple Action Steps to protect your children’s
health. At the end of each chapter, you will find out where to get more help.
It’s up to you—Help Yourself to a Healthy Home!
-6-
Most people spend at least half of their lives
inside their homes. The air inside can
be more harmful to your family’s health
than the air outdoors. Is the air in your home safe to
breathe?
It is not always easy to tell if your home has poor air
quality. You may notice bad smells or see smoke, but
you cannot see or smell other dangers, like carbon
monoxide or radon. This chapter and those on asthma
and allergies, mold, and carbon monoxide will help
you ask the right questions to find out if the air inside
your home is healthy and safe. They will also give you
ideas about how to fix any problems you might find.
Asthma and Allergies If someone in your home has health problems or is
ill, polluted indoor air can make them feel worse. For
example, asthma is a lung disease that affects a growing
number of children. Indoor air pollution can make
it worse. Insects and other pests can also be a real prob-
lem for people with asthma or allergies. For example,
cockroach and dust mite droppings cause asthma
attacks in some people. Pesticides can help fight these
pests but they can be dangerous. See page 44 for more
information about using bug spray and other pesticides
safely. See page 11 to find out about making your home
healthier for people with asthma or allergies.
Mold Mold grows in wet or damp places. It often smells
musty. Many people are allergic to mold. Some kinds
of mold are toxic, and coming into contact with large
amounts of mold may cause health problems. Talk to
a doctor if you think mold is causing health problems
for you or your family. See page 17 to learn more about
how to control mold in your home.
Carbon Monoxide Carbon monoxide is a deadly gas that can come from
appliances that burn gas, oil, coal, or wood, and are not
working as they should. Car exhaust also has carbon
monoxide. You cannot see, taste or smell carbon mon-
oxide. See page 23 for more information on how to protect
your family from carbon monoxide poisoning.
Other Indoor Air Problems Radon is another gas. It can get into some homes
from the ground below them. You cannot see, taste,
or smell radon. Radon is found all over the United
States. Radon can cause lung cancer. In fact, it is the
second leading cause of lung cancer in the U.S. If you
smoke and your home has high levels of radon, your
risk of lung cancer is especially high.
Indoor Air Quality Should You Be Concerned?
FA C
TS The air in your home
can be unhealthy if
it has too many
pollutants in it. To
cut down on indoor
air pollution, learn
where it comes from.
Take good care of
your home to keep it
healthy!
Children can spend up
to 90% of their time
indoors. For their size,
children breathe up to
twice as much air as
adults. That means
children are at greater
risk for health prob-
lems that come from
indoor air pollution.
-6-
Indoor Air Quality
-7–6- -7-
Indoor Air Quality
Sometimes indoor air pollution comes from what people do in their home.
• Tobacco smoking causes cancer and other major
health problems. It’s unsafe for children to be around
smokers. Second-hand or environmental tobacco
smoke can raise children’s risk of ear infections and
breathing problems. It can trigger asthma attacks, too.
• Many families have pets. However, furry pets
cause problems for some people. Pets can make
asthma and allergies act up, especially if you
keep them in sleeping areas.
• Hobbies and home projects sometimes
involve sanding, painting, welding, or
using solvent chemicals, like varnish or
paint strippers. (A solvent is a chemical
that can dissolve something else.
Solvents are usually liquid.) Home
projects can pollute the air with dust
or harmful chemicals.
Sometimes indoor air pollution comes from what people have in their homes.
• Some household products, especially
those with solvents, can pollute the
air if you don’t use them in the right
way. See page 38 for more information
about household products
• New furniture, carpets, and building
products may give off chemicals that
were used in their making. Some of these chemicals
can harm people, especially children.
• If your home was built before 1978, the paint may
have lead in it. Lead is very dangerous for young
children. See page 29 to learn about protecting
your children from lead poisoning
There are simple, but important steps you can take
to find out what is causing poor air quality. The
questions on the next page can help you find
problems around your home. Page 9 will give you ideas
of what to do. Look at the chapters on asthma and
allergies, mold, and carbon monoxide to learn more
about indoor air problems. Remember, making your
home a safer, healthier place to live may mean taking
several steps.
Combustion appliances are one possible source of air pollution.
-8-
Indoor Air Quality
Your Family’s Health
• Does anyone in your family
have asthma or allergies?
• Does a family
member notice
burning eyes,
coughing, or
sneezing that
happens most
often while at home?
• Does anyone in your home have chronic bronchitis
or another lung disease?
Radon
• Have you ever tested your home for radon?
• Do any of your neighbors have problems with
radon gas? If so, you might also have a radon prob-
lem.
Living in a Healthy Home
• Do some areas in your home smell damp or musty?
• Have you seen cockroaches in your home?
• Do you know how to safely run and take
care of your fuel-burning appliances?
• Do you allow smoking in your
home?
• Do you have furry pets in your
home? In the bedrooms?
• Do you read the label on
household products, and follow the
directions for using them safely?
• Do you open win-
dows or turn on fans
when doing hobbies
or projects that make
dust or odors?
• Do you try to do
dusty or smelly
projects outdoors?
• Do you choose
furniture, carpet,
and building prod-
ucts that are made
with non-toxic chem-
icals and materials?
These are sometimes called green building products.
• Does your home ever smell musty, damp, smoky,
or like chemicals?
• Does your home seem stuffy or stale? Can you
smell cooking odors the next day?
• Do your bathroom and kitchen have exhaust
fans—do you use them?
?Questions to Ask
-8-
-9–8- -9-
Indoor Air Quality
Be sure to check the Action Steps in the
chapters on asthma and allergies, mold,
and carbon monoxide. You will find good sug-
gestions for cutting down on pollution in your
home and making the air healthier.
Test Your Home for Radon You can buy low cost radon test kits
at hardware or home supply stores.
Or call your local or state health depart-
ment for more information.
Living in a Healthy Home • Do not smoke in your home or car.
Never smoke near your children.
• Pay attention to housekeeping. Taking
care of food and spills right away
keeps bugs and pests away. A clean
home is a healthier home.
• Open windows or use
fans to let in fresh air
whenever someone
uses chemicals
in the home or
garage.
• Ask the sales-
person to unroll
new carpet
and let it air
out for at
least one
day
before
bringing it into your home. Put in
carpet during a season when you can open
windows for several days afterwards. Vacuum
old carpet well before you remove it to
keep down dust.
• Let new furniture and building
materials air out for a few days
before bringing them inside. Before
buying new things for your home,
ask for products made with non-
toxic chemicals and materials.
Sometimes non-toxic or
green building products cost
more money. You need to
decide if the cost is worth
it to protect the
health of your family.
• Keep pets out of bed-
rooms and living
areas.
ACTION STEPS
-10-
When In Doubt, Check It Out!
✆ -10-
• US Environmental Protection Agency Indoor Air
Quality Home Page—www.epa.gov/iaq
• Indoor Air Quality Information Clearinghouse
(IAQ INFO) 800/438-4318 (Monday to Friday,
9:00 a.m – 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time) or email:
• National Radon Information Hotline
800/SOS RADON (800/767-7236)
• The National Consumer Federation’s Radon
Website—www.radonfixit.org
• National Lead Information Center 800/424-LEAD
(800/424-5323)
• National Hispanic Indoor Air Quality Hotline
800/SALUD-12 (800/725-8312), Monday to Friday,
9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Eastern Time
• American Lung Association. Contact your local
organization, call 800/LUNG-USA (800/586-4872)
or visit the web at www.lungusa.org
• Contact Healthy Indoor Air for America’s Homes
at 406/994-3451 or www.healthyindoorair.org
• Home*A*Syst: An Environmental Risk Assessment
Guide for the Home contains information about
indoor air quality and other healthy home topics.
608/262-0024 or www.uwex.edu/homeasyst
Indoor Air Quality
Notes
This chapter was written by Kathleen Parrott, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. ©2002 University of Wisconsin Extension. All rights reserved.
-11–10-
More than eight million children in the
United States have a disease called asthma.
Asthma is a leading reason that children
miss school or end up in the hospital. Asthma makes it
hard for people to breathe. Sometimes people even die
from asthma. This disease has no cure yet, but it can
be controlled.
Another 40 to 50 million people have allergies. Allergies
can also make it hard for people to breathe by causing
an asthma attack. An allergy is an unusual reaction to
something, like a food or a plant, which is normally
harmless. Common signs of allergies are a stuffy or
runny nose, itching, or a rash. This section will help
you ask the right questions to find out how to make
your home a safer, healthier place for people with
asthma or allergies.
What Happens During an Asthma Attack? Asthma flare-ups are called asthma attacks. During an
attack, the breathing tubes in your lungs, called bronchi
and bronchioles, get smaller. During an asthma attack:
• The breathing tubes in your lungs swell up
• The muscles around these tubes tighten
• The tubes make large amounts of a thick fluid
called mucus
You cannot catch asthma. It does run in families
though. If someone in your family has it, you or
your children may too. The number of asthma cases
is growing, and more people die from it every year.
These deaths do not need to happen.
Warning Signs of an Asthma Attack: • Tightness in the chest
• Shortness of breath
• Wheezing
• Coughing
People with asthma who learn to spot the early signs of an attack can take medicine right away. This may make the attack less severe.
Asthma & Allergies Should You Be Concerned?
-11-
Asthma & Allergies
FACT If someone is having a severe asthma attack, get him or her to a hos-
pital emergency room right away. Some signs
of a severe attack:
• The person’s asthma rescue or inhaler
medicine doesn’t help within 15 minutes
• The person’s lips or fingernails are blue
• The person has trouble walking or talking
due to shortness of breath
The most important thing to know about
asthma is that you can control it. Asthma
patients (or their parents) who learn what
medicine to take and what triggers attacks
can avoid
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