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- Indoors and outdoors, here are steps you can take to protect your children.
- Be sure to take a few safety steps before stoking the flames.
- Take a few smart measures before settling in for a warm winter in front of the fire.
- Check out three ways you can improve your organization and save money.
- Adding enzymes to laundry detergents provides consumers with the cleanest wash yet.
- Box it up; move it out.
- Study found no difference in the improvement experienced by children who lived in homes with carpet versus children from homes with other types of flooring.
- Here's how to prevent your grill from getting dirty unnecessarily, and clean up before and after cookouts.
- A growing number of homeowners are realizing that it's a good idea to prepare their home for cooler weather - just as they would their wardrobe and vehicles.
- Stain removal products containing oxygen bleaches must be used correctly or bleach spots may result.
- To keep your vacuum cleaner operating at peak levels of performance, follow these simple maintenance tips from the IEHA.
- Check the humidity levels in your home to ensure comfortable breathing.
- After learning about dust mites, you too, may want to see if your vacuum cleaner is a CRI certified product.
- 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.
- Organizing your home can reduce stress levels, and there are easy ways to declutter while being mindful of the environment.
- Map out the flow for your home office.
- Product testing doesn’t have to be a complicated process or take much time, but it does need to be a planned and defined process with specific things to measure and reliable ways to measure them.
- Ten steps to better indoor environmental quality
- A new animated, interactive Web site from EPA identifies everyday exposures to radiation, including in the home.
- EPA's Science Advisory Board has identified perchloroethylene as a possible to probable human carcinogen.

