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- The IICRC answers several commonly asked questions about professional carpet cleaning.
- Homeowners can take a number of steps to improve air quality and create a healthier living environment.
- How HEPA filters work on a vacuum cleaner, and how to be a smart shopper.
- Where there's fire, there's usually smoke. Although experts do their best to contain a fire, they are all but helpless in controlling the billowing clouds of smoke that fire creates. What can you do once the damage has been done?
- An Environmental Protection Agency list of indoor pollutants and solutions that could affect your health.
- Families are questioning the presence of chemical products in their homes and taking steps to replace them with healthier alternatives made from more benign ingredients.
- Sweeping can be downright simple if you follow a few basic principles.
- It’s unwise to think that super filters will solve IAQ problems that originate elsewhere.
- Life is full of surprises, and not all of them good! Depending on the severity of the incident, picking up the pieces and putting things back as they were can be a challenge many homeowners would rather avoid.
- Ten steps to better indoor environmental quality
- The new reference guide, which provides updates to the standard originally released in 2003, will help cleaning professionals provide high-quality service, and assist consumers in finding qualified firms to perform remediation.
- After learning about dust mites, you too, may want to see if your vacuum cleaner is a CRI certified product.
- It takes more to get rid of fleas than simply treating your pet.
- Pocket pets can transmit salmonella to people. Here's how to handle them safely.
- Steam vapor cleaning differs from traditional "steam cleaning" of carpet.
- The Clean Trust has a few tips to make cleaning easier.
- You CAN fit the crucial stuff in before visitors show up. Here is a planned strategy!
- The good news is that the most difficult and expensive measures are not always the most effective – nor are they always necessary.
- Adding plants is a great way to spruce up your home, but if you share your home with a dog or cat, you’ll want to choose your plants carefully.
- Use methods, products and tools that work for you, not against you, to make your home a healthier place. HousekeepingChannel.com interviews David Mudarri, formerly of the Indoor Environments Division of the EPA.

