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- Along with the beauty of winter wonderlands, comes a yearly winterizing check of your home.
- 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.
- When you get down to it, a hard-surface floor is easy to care for.
- EPA's Science Advisory Board has identified perchloroethylene as a possible to probable human carcinogen.
- With mice and rats, the best cure is prevention. The best "Plan B" is immediate action.
- According to two studies, flushed toilets spew aerosolized plumes of moisture, bacteria and viruses over many bathroom surfaces.
- Water is the lifeblood of civilization - a necessity for life and health of man, animal, and plants. However, water also has the power to wreak havoc as a silent thief, stealing peace of mind and ruining property.
- Identify the source and attack it intelligently.
- Take steps to relieve window wetness and mold growth.
- How can homeowners undo the mess and ensure their home is safe, clean, and livable once again?
- Whether you are the victim of a flood or your plumbing sprang a leak while you're on vacation, the Institute of Inspection Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC) offers some helpful suggestions on what to do.
- The Association of Specialists in Cleaning and Restoration explains cellulosic browning.
- Complete avoidance may be difficult, but simple steps can be taken to reduce exposure.
- Ten steps to better indoor environmental quality
- As a result of a recent flooding disaster, your home may look like a river ran through it. Here's what to do right away.
- It’s silent, colorless, odorless and tasteless, but it can be fatal.
- Keys to asthma-proofing your home.
- What you don’t see can hurt you. Invisible to the naked eye, a world of microorganisms (living things so small you need a microscope to see them) lives in soil, on your skin, in your mouth, on the floor, doorknobs, cell phones, walls, computer keyboards, or countertops — pretty much everywhere.
- Naturally, the best way to prevent odor is to eliminate its source (e.g., take out the garbage, smoke or keep pets outside, etc.), but what about existing odors already permeating your home?
- An Environmental Protection Agency list of indoor pollutants and solutions that could affect your health.

