Caring For Your Indoor Air
By: Chief Meteorologist Joe Murgo
Updated: February 20, 2013
Indoor air pollutants come from a variety of sources, including wood stoves and fireplaces, cleaning products, paints and lacquers, mold and pet dander. You can care for the air inside your home at little or no cost with these simple steps:
Ventilate to increase the amount of fresh air in your home. When weather permits, open windows and doors to let fresh air in. Use bathroom and kitchen fans that exhaust to the outdoors to ventilate and help remove pollutants from your home.
Change filters on central heaters and air conditioners regularly - these filters trap dust and other pollutants.
Adjust humidity in your home. Try to keep indoor humidity levels at 30 to 50 percent to reduce the likelihood of mold growth.
Install a carbon monoxide alarm to alert you and your family of dangerous levels of this colorless, odorless gas that can build up when space heaters, wood stoves, fireplaces, gas stoves and other combustion appliances are improperly vented.


