Mary Ellen Bartley

Get to the Source
Most pollutants and irritants will only affect people who suffer
from allergies or other breathing problems. "People at risk of
being discomforted by inhalation exposures in the home will
largely be people who already have some kind of lung trouble,
such as asthma or emphysema," says David Cugell, M.D., professor
of Pulmonary Diseases at Northwestern University Medical School
in Chicago. "Otherwise healthy people will rarely encounter in a
home environment something really significant in terms of their
long-range health."
Many irritants can be left at the door. Consider having a
no-shoe household, since chemicals and allergens from lawns
enter on shoes. When you finish gardening or lawn mowing, change
clothes as soon as you enter the house. Pollen and chemicals
attach to our clothing during outdoor activity, then spread to
floors and furniture.
Carpeting is a major haven for all these irritants. If you have a
choice, wood floors are the air-friendly option.
To deal with pollutants once they've entered the home, Astry
recommends a three-pronged attack: filtration, ventilation, and
moisture control.