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16 Ways to Heal Your Home

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Co-op America

[coopamericanews]

Tuesday, April 08, 2008 10:09 AM

Diana Gonzalez

16 Ways to Heal Your Home

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dear Diana

Gonzalez‚

 

 

Did you know that

here in the US, about 80,000

industrial chemicals are registered for use in all of the

products we eat, touch‚ wear‚ and use to furnish our homes… but that fewer than 20 percent have

been tested for their impact on human health and the environment?

These include

ingredients in our food, household cleaners‚ and body care products.

They include chemicals used on and in toys and furniture and clothing and bed

linens.

Wouldn't it make

more sense to prove

a chemical is safe before running the risk of harming people

who use the product‚ workers who make it, and the communities where the manufacturing

facilities are located?

That’s the idea

behind the Precautionary Principle. It turns right-side-up the

upside-down way our society makes decisions about risk. The

Precautionary Principle requires proof that products are safe‚ and errs on the

side of caution.

We’ve built our

new Healthy Home Center on our Web site

with the Precautionary Principle in mind. We’ve pulled together

the best

" healthy home " articles from our green-living

newsletter‚ Real Money‚

along with new tips

and strategies from the spring issue of our Co-op America Quarterly

magazine.

We introduce 16 ways to heal your home,

and there’s much‚ much more information in the Healthy Home Center.

Please forward this e-mail to your friends,

and if you have a blog, myspace account‚ Facebook account‚ or other online

site, please share Co-op America’s Healthy Home Center with your readers. Let us know and we'll link back to

you in an upcoming e-newsletter.

 

Here's to healthy homes and a healthy planet‚

 

Alisa Gravitz

Executive Director

Co-op America

 

Below‚ we outline

the problems with 16 conventional household products. Click

through to Co-op America's Healthy Home Center to learn about

solutions – ways to heal every part of your home. (Also, all of the

linked terms below, like " phthalates " ‚ take

you straight to our online glossary for a better understanding of the

problems some of the worst chemicals can cause.)

1)

Conventional body care products – More than one-third of personal care

products contain at least one ingredient linked to cancer, and very few

products are tested for safety. Some products contain phthalates‚ which don't appear in the

list of a product's ingredients -- instead they are covered by the

general term " fragrance. "

Body Care

Solutions »

2)

Chemical Air Fresheners – Air fresheners contain dangerous

ingredients like dichlorobenzene‚ naphthalene‚ and formaldehyde.

Air Freshener

Solutions »

3)

PVC Shower Curtains – Polyvinyl chloride, also known as

PVC‚ the vinyl in your shower curtain‚ is a plastic that’s dangerous to

people and the environment at every stage of its lifecycle.

Shower

Curtain Solutions»

4)

Conventional Cleaners – Many household

cleaners contain volatile organic compounds (VOCs),

such as formaldehyde‚ harsh acids‚ and

hormone disruptors.

Cleaning

Solutions»

5)

Paints and Stains – Conventional paints contain three chemicals worth

worrying about: VOCs‚ fungicides‚ and biocides.

Other problematic ingredients can include mercury‚ arsenic disulfide‚ phenol‚ and formaldehyde.

Painting

Solutions »

6)

Furniture – Some wood

furniture can release VOCs from adhesives and finishes. Urea formaldehyde is used in particle

board furniture. Most upholstered furniture is treated with

flame-retardant polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PDBEs).

Furniture

Solutions »

7) Flooring

– Wall-to-wall

carpets harbor allergens and trap toxins. Most synthetic carpets and

their adhesives also emit VOCs. Carpeting may be treated with benzyl benzoate or other chemicals

for mothproofing or to repel moisture.

Flooring

Solutions »

8)

Vinyl Siding – Home siding can be the single largest use

of vinyl‚ made from PVC‚ in a home. Vinyl siding

often contains DEHP‚ an additive‚ and a phthalate.

Siding

Solutions »

9)

Wooden Decks and Playsets – Until a few years ago, pressure-treated

wood for decks and play equipment was routinely covered in chromium copper arsenate (CCA) to

kill insects and prevent rot. CCA leaches arsenic that sticks to the hands and

is absorbed through skin.

Deck/Playset

Solutions »

10)

Pesticides

– Too many homeowners needlessly use hazardous chemicals on their lawns, and

these chemicals can drift into their homes and pollute indoor air.

Lawncare

Solutions »

11)

Cookware –

Non-stick pans with Teflon or Teflon-like coatings contain polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), which

break down into the air at high temperatures.

Cookware

Solutions »

12)

Plastics –

Hard-to-recycle plastics often contain toxins that can leach into food and

water‚ especially when heated.

Plastics

Solutions »

13)

Conventional Produce – Many non-organic fruits and vegetables carry

pesticide residue. Twenty-three of the world's 28 most commonly used

pesticides are suspected carcinogens, and several are possible neurotoxins

and endocrine disruptors.

Produce

Solutions»

14)

Seafood –

Some fish can contain mercury and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs).

Some experts say that FDA and EPA fish consumption limits, established to

keep pregnant women and children safe‚ are too lax.

Seafood

Solutions »

15)

Bed linens

– Toxic chemicals that resist flames, water, moths, stains, and wrinkles are

sometimes added to textiles like bedclothes. Labels like

" permanent-press‚ " " no-iron‚ " " water

repellent‚ " and " flame retardant‚ " may indicate fabric

treatments that off-gas chemicals like formaldehyde and perfluorochemicas (PFCs).

Bed linens

Solutions »

16)

Mattresses –

Federal laws require mattresses to be fire resistant, so many manufacturers

treat the mattress foam with flame-retardant chemicals. The most dangerous

are polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs)‚

which some manufacturers are phasing out voluntarily.

Mattress

Solutions »

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If you have a blog or a personal

Web site,

post or link to Co-op America's 16 Ways to Heal Your Home and

help us spread the word. E-mail us to let us know you've

linked to our site‚ and we'll link back to you in an upcoming blogroll.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Support our work to build a

greener economy by donating to our Climate Action program. Help us

build a greener energy future for America.

Donate

today »

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Visit Co-op America's Healthy Home Center to learn more

about creating a healthy, happy‚ nontoxic home‚ and find articles on

everything from green decks‚ to solar water heaters‚ to keeping allergens

out of your bedroom.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Not yet a

supporting member? Join today to receive the 2008

edition of our National

Green Pages™ delivered right to your door. Membership is

only $20 and includes a subscription to our bi-monthly green-living

newsletter Real Money,

our magazine the Co-op

America Quarterly, and a copy of our Financial Planning Handbook. Your

membership provides valuable support for our economic action programs for

people and the planet.

 

Join today »

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

JOIN CO-OP AMERICA | DONATE TODAY

| SEND THIS TO A FRIEND

Co-op America, 1612 K St NW Suite

600, Washington DC 20006 - (800) 58 GREEN - www.coopamerica.org

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