Cleaning Products for a Healthy Home

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Consumers are presented with many choices for strong, effective cleaning products, but often at a risk to the environment and personal health.
Consumers are presented with many choices for strong, effective cleaning products, but often at a risk to the environment and personal health.
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Although there are many great cleaning products on the market, it is not always clear what ingredients and/or potency they carry, making it difficult to establish a toxin-free home.
Although there are many great cleaning products on the market, it is not always clear what ingredients and/or potency they carry, making it difficult to establish a toxin-free home.
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According to the ratings on by the Environmental Working Group (EWG), the majority of all-purpose cleaning products score poorly on disclosure of ingredients and toxicity.
According to the ratings on by the Environmental Working Group (EWG), the majority of all-purpose cleaning products score poorly on disclosure of ingredients and toxicity.
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Labeling for safe cleaning products has benefited consumers greatly, but since so few have been certified, consumers are still left scouring the isles.
Labeling for safe cleaning products has benefited consumers greatly, but since so few have been certified, consumers are still left scouring the isles.
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Sometimes simplicity is safest. Making cleaning products at home, with simple ingredients can prove cost-effective without sacrificing the cleaning quality.
Sometimes simplicity is safest. Making cleaning products at home, with simple ingredients can prove cost-effective without sacrificing the cleaning quality.
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“Building A Sustainable Home” by Melissa Rappaport Schifman encompasses the logistics of choosing windows, insulation, appliances, lighting, and other materials for making a sustainable home.
“Building A Sustainable Home” by Melissa Rappaport Schifman encompasses the logistics of choosing windows, insulation, appliances, lighting, and other materials for making a sustainable home.

Building A Sustainable Home (Skyhorse Publishing, 2018), by Melissa Rappaport Schifman, is a guide to sustainable materials and design options on the market for making an energy-efficient, green home. Schifman founded Green Intention LLC and is an Editor at Rise. She lives in a LEED Gold Certified home and works to establish LEED certification in residential and commercial buildings. The following excerpt discusses how you can establish a clean home that is both healthy and environmentally friendly.

Nobody actually goes into a store and asks for the most toxic cleaning product on the shelf — we just want to get the job done. Tough chemicals do the job of cleaning pretty well; that is how they are marketed. So, what is wrong with household cleaners? The big picture answer is that there are at least 83,000 chemicals on the market today, and they are not well regulated. Exposure to chemicals is linked to health problems such as cancer, birth defects, asthma, allergies, skin reactions, and reproductive disorders. Sometimes illnesses stem from overexposure (acute), which is an immediate one-time reaction that can trigger chronic illness; sometimes illnesses come from long-term exposure that builds up over time.


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