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What's in the Air?
10 Ways to Protect Your Child from Air Pollution
By Laura Cone
"Our study adds to the growing body of evidence linking air pollution and respiratory deaths," Wilhelm says. "We hope this information helps guide future air-quality standard setting and that infants continue to be considered a particularly sensitive population. For SIDS, I think more research is still needed."
Tom Rodgers, the air cleaning senior product manager for Aprilaire in Madison, Wis., says new homeowners often do not realize they need a whole-house air-cleaning system because builders construct homes that are tight and prevent natural ventilation.
"You are living in a Ziploc," Rodgers says. "People are moving toward mechanical ventilation versus opening windows. You want to control how much air comes in and out."
Rodgers says an air-cleaning system should be installed near a heating and cooling system so the outside air introduced into the home is first filtered through the cleaning system before circulating the home.
Rodgers says Aprilaire, a brand of indoor air-quality products sold through and installed by HVAC contractors in the United States and Canada, has different whole-home air cleaners in different price ranges. "The advantage is it treats all the air in the whole house, not just a bedroom or playroom or whatever other room the child may be in," he says.
Rodgers, who has a son, two dogs and four cats, has "horrible" allergies and has an air cleaner in his home. "This is not a scientific study, but my mother, who is allergic to cats, can come over to our house and not have to take anything for her allergies," he says.
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