Improving the Air Quality in Your Home - Indoor Air and Your Health
Indoor Air and Your Health
Health effects from indoor air pollutants
may be experienced soon after exposure or, possibly, years later.
Immediate effects may show up after a
single exposure or repeated exposures. These include irritation of the eyes,
nose, and throat, headaches, dizziness, and fatigue. Such immediate effects are
usually short-term and treatable. Sometimes the treatment is simply eliminating
the person's exposure to the source of the pollution, if it can be identified.
Symptoms of some diseases, including asthma, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, and
humidifier fever, may also show up soon after exposure to some indoor air
pollutants.
The likelihood of immediate reactions to
indoor air pollutants depends on several factors. Age and preexisting medical
conditions are two important influences. In other cases, whether a person
reacts to a pollutant depends on individual sensitivity, which varies
tremendously from person to person. Some people can become sensitized to
biological pollutants after repeated exposures, and it appears that some people
can become sensitized to chemical pollutants as well.
Certain immediate effects are similar to
those from colds or other viral diseases, so it is often difficult to determine
if the symptoms are a result of exposure to indoor air pollution. For this
reason, it is important to pay attention to the time and place the symptoms
occur. If the symptoms fade or go away when a person is away from the home and
return when the person returns, an effort should be made to identify indoor air
sources that may be possible causes. Some effects may be made worse by an
inadequate supply of outdoor air or from the heating, cooling, or humidity
conditions prevalent in the home.
Other health effects may show up either
years after exposure has occurred or only after long or repeated periods of
exposure. These effects, which include some respiratory diseases, heart
disease, and cancer, can be severely debilitating or fatal. It is prudent to
try to improve the indoor air quality in your home even if symptoms are not
noticeable. More information on potential health effects from particular indoor
air pollutants is provided in the section, "A
Look at Source-Specific Controls."
While pollutants commonly found in indoor
air are responsible for many harmful effects, there is considerable uncertainty
about what concentrations or periods of exposure are necessary to produce
specific health problems. People also react very differently to exposure to
indoor air pollutants. Further research is needed to better understand which
health effects occur after exposure to the average pollutant concentrations
found in homes and which occur from the higher concentrations that occur for
short periods of time.
The health effects associated with some
indoor air pollutants are summarized in the section "Reference
Guide to Major Indoor Air Pollutants in the Home."