
Wood burners triple harmful indoor air pollution, study finds
Exclusive: Burners should be sold with health warnings, say scientists who found tiny particles flooding into rooms
You know, sort of like the warning on a pack of smokes.
I tend to agree with this, wood stoves are just one source of indoor air pollution, and probably not one of the worst.My wife sets the smoke alarms off when cooking breakfast. She came with warnings too, but i didn't listen.
But seriously, I wonder how this would compare to all the other respiratory hazards out there. Cooking, wood shop dust, diesel, the neighbors bonfires, inversions. We're fairly rural and up high, so those outside influences are rare. I purposely keep the house kind of loose at the joints (a few gaps here and there like at the door seals) just to get a supply of fresh air. As long as I have a supply of wood, I'll take the fresh air. There are homes that are super sealed, with air/air heat exchangers - are they healthy?
I get a bit of ash on the ground in front of the stoves on occasion, especially the cookstove, but a good room air filter and mopping frequently have really cut down on our house dust.I do find that during the burning season, everything in the stove room gets a layer of dust on it. I think most of it is ash from cleanouts and the little bit that spills out during reloads then sucked through the blower when it is turned back on.
Maybe I'll just start wearing my mask at home now, too.
You are right!I get a bit of ash on the ground in front of the stoves on occasion, especially the cookstove, but a good room air filter and mopping frequently have really cut down on our house dust.
You are right!
We are pretty diligent about sweeping the ash up during reloads, before turning the blower back on, and we have an air filter that we fire up from time to time when I see lots of particles in the afternoon sun beams. We have a lot of rugs, so that catches a lot, and for some odd reason the little lady loves to vacuum, and has a real nice one that she uses to the point of distraction.
I'm not worried for a second about the dangers described in the article. My draft is sucking almost everything right out the chimney when we reload.
Your point about candles is a really good one. It's sort of ironic that wood burning for actual heat gets all this attention in the UK, wonder if candle burning for "ambiance" gets any?I got a Dyson V10 Pet cordless and my wife uses it several times a day. We also have dogs in the house, one being a white German Shepherd, so it comes with the territory. We are finding more dust upstairs, since our dogs don't go up there we don't vacuum as often. If you live in a place with high silica content in the soil, that is probably more dangerous than a bit of ash in the house. People often burn scented candles in an effort to improve indoor air quality, but most of those candles release led and other carcinogens into the atmosphere. Even the "soy" candles are not good, only the real beeswax and cotton wicked candles are non-carcinogenic.
Indoor air pollution has killed millions of humans over the years. Smoke inhalation from open firepits in houses, the primary means of having a fire for most of human history, was a huge cause of illness among early humans. Whenever I see a fireplace in a youtube video, movie, tv show, etc. and see heavy smoke staining on the lintel I know that someone in that house probably suffers from respiratory issues. I know it seems kind of "nanny state" but that very thing is what helps people live healthy lives into their 70's and 80s, sometimes even folks in their 90's are active, using stairs, etc. Ever seen what a Kerosene lantern looks like after it burns for a while? Even just lighting a home introduced smoke and toxic particles into the room air. Sometimes I do marvel that humans are even alive.I'm so glad mankind made it from before BC to the mid 2000's without these warnings about dangerous indoor pollutants. I mean lets get real here, as a society we have shifted to such a nanny state of mind. I can remember the days of going to a bar and literally wearing cigarettes by the time I left to go home, sometimes to much is really to much.
This is because manufacturers and other makers of retail products do not always disclose harmful compenents/ingredients. Used to be that arsenic was used to make green dyes and paint. This caused thousands of arsenic poisoning deaths since arsenic can be absorbed through the skin by touching the painted objects or inhaled when the wallpaper or paint was removed from a surface. Just like asbestosis caused by asbestos being in just about everything .The fact that the CA Prop 65 warning is on almost everything should be a wake up call, not the butt of a joke. It should be terrifying to people that cancer causing ingredients can be found in your wife's skin cream or other basic products.Just about anything you buy in CA has warnings, so much so that no one pays attention to them. When did it become the government's job to warn you about all of the risks associated with living, real or imagined?
What really amazes me is the differences in the resiliency of the human body. I work in a welding shop, I've worked with career welders in their 60's and early 70's that are healthier then most in that age group, welding fumes, metal fumes, grinding dust, and a pack of cigarettes a day hasn't seemed to phase them. I've also worked with those in their early 30's that have been diagnosed with "manganism", essentially a Parkinson's like condition caused by a build up of manganese in the brain from the inhalation of metal fumes.
My counterpoint would be: So we should expect corporations with one exceptionally dominant motivation to look out for us? A recent example is the Sandler family and their corporate machine who made billions by getting as much of the world as they could hooked on opiates. Cigarette companies and fossil fuel companies are other good examples. There are many, many other examples.I'm so glad mankind made it from before BC to the mid 2000's without these warnings about dangerous indoor pollutants. I mean lets get real here, as a society we have shifted to such a nanny state of mind. I can remember the days of going to a bar and literally wearing cigarettes by the time I left to go home, sometimes to much is really to much.
I do find that during the burning season, everything in the stove room gets a layer of dust on it. I think most of it is ash from cleanouts and the little bit that spills out during reloads then sucked through the blower when it is turned back on.
Maybe I'll just start wearing my mask at home now, too.
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