Low VOC Paints May Still Cause Asthma and Allergies

Low VOC Paints May Still Cause Asthma and Allergies

According to Tom Lemt of the Pharos Project and the policy director of the Healthy Building Network, fumes from chemicals commonly used in water-based paints and solvents may be associated with substantially higher rates of asthma, stuffy noses and eczema. The Swedish/US joint study reported in Environmental Health News this week found that children sleeping in rooms with higher concentrations of propylene glycol and glycol ether compounds (PGEs) in the air were two to four times more likely to suffer symptoms.

Ironically, PGEs have been used more widely in cleaners and paints as manufacturers have sought to lower their VOCs (volatile organic compounds). PGEs are VOCs, but they emit at lower levels than the older, highly toxic oil solvent-based compounds. Pharos now identifies PGE compounds when they appear in paints and other products with links to this information and will watch the science for further information on the connections between asthma and chemicals in building products.

Given the lack of full disclosure of material contents in most paints and the still evolving science on other contributors to asthma, the most protective path is to choose paints with no VOCs. Paints that score 7 or higher in the Pharos VOC category have at least a manufacturer declaration that there are no VOCs (PGEs included) in the formula, including so-called “exempt VOCs.” And don’t forget the tints. Specify VOC free tints to make sure the PGEs and other VOCs that you kept out of the paint don’t sneak back in through the colorant.

The Pharos Project, a project of the Healthy Building Network, connects you to a network of building professionals and manufacturers committed to transparency as a core value on the path to sustainability. Pharos is not a certification or label, it is information: the critical health and environmental data about the manufacture, use, and end of life of building materials specified and used every day. All delivered in an easy to use web based tool. For more information go to www.pharosproject.net www.healthybuilding.net.

Coal-fired Power Plants Still Problematic – WDUQNews (blog)


Sandusky Register

Coal-fired Power Plants Still Problematic
WDUQNews (blog)
says coal is not as cheap as the industry claims because of the extra health care costs accrued by people who've had heart attacks, asthma attacks, etc.
Study decries pollution from coalPittsburgh Post Gazette
Coal-burning pollution raises area's premature deaths, study saysWilkes Barre Times-Leader
Study estimates power plant pollution deathsMacon Telegraph
Rochester City Newspaper (blog) –Columbus Dispatch –Marietta Times
all 74 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News

Free health clinics still drawing large crowds in cities across U.S.

Free health clinics still drawing large crowds in cities across U.S.
Parade: A series of no-cost health care clinics are making their way across America. In Atlanta 1,050 volunteers gave their time to serve uninsured Americans who needed medical care. “The Atlanta mega-clinic was the sixth in a series that began in September. (The first was held in Houston in partnership with TV talk-show host and cardiothoracic surgeon Dr. Mehmet Oz.)

Read more on News-Medical-Net