Improving Indoor Air Quality

How to Protect Yourself from Poor Air Quality During Wildfires

Added by: Editor

IQAir Gives Tips on Improving Air Quality

Health Tips for Residents that Suffer from Poor Air Quality during Wildfires
How to Protect Yourself from Poor Air Quality During Wildfires
Wildfires produce millions of tiny pollution particles, in the form of smoke. Concentrations of fine particulates in much of Los Angeles and Orange County are reaching levels which are up to 100 times higher than those on even the smoggiest days. To combat this serious health threat, health officials are advising the population to stay inside and keep doors and windows closed. While this helps to keep some of smoke out, the small particles from the smoke will eventually still make their way indoors, through cracks and gaps in the building. The following tips will help you to create a “clean zone” in your home during heavy outdoor smoke from wildfires.

  • After closing doors and windows, use duct tape and plastic sheeting to seal cracks around the doors and outside vents.
  • Replace your furnace filter with a high-efficiency filter upgrade. These are available from most hardware and home improvement stores and cost $10-20.
  • Run your air conditioning system. You can run the fan only, if you are comfortable with the temperature. Constantly cycling the air through you air conditioning system with upgraded air filters, will remove some of the air pollutants.
  • Don’t run your bathroom exhaust fans, since this will cause more polluted outside air to be drawn into the home.
  • Create a safe-room within your house with the help of a room air cleaner with a HEPA filter. This will be the room where particularly sensitive members of your family, those with emphysema, allergies or asthma can retreat to. Room air cleaners with HEPA filters are available through specialty retailers and can be purchased over the internet. Expect to pay about $600 for a good HEPA room air cleaner.
  • If you do have to go outside, you may want to wear a fine dust mask, as is available though home improvement stores. These masks will typically sell for $5-40. If you do not have access to mask you may use a wet cloth to breathe through. Do not use the simple surgical masks, as used by doctors, they are ineffective against small smoke particles.

Frank Hammes, President of IQAir North America, Inc., is an expert on air quality and air quality control measures. He lectures and trains indoor air quality professionals on ways to help residents create healthier indoor environments during natural disasters such as wildfires.

See our Safe Room Comparison chart for the IQAir purifiers we recommend:

For a quick features overview of air purifiers we carry, see our all hepa air cleaners, home air purifiers, all chemical and smoke air purifiers, and all portable and central air purifiers guides.

Here is a customer’s past comments about how an IQAir air purifier helped with smoke from a wildfire 10 miles from their home.

Air Purifiers & Air Cleaners
Air Purifiers & HEPA Air Cleaners
IQAir HealthPro  Plus Air Purifier Airfree Air Sterilizers IQAir HealthPro Compact Plus Air Purifiers Blueair 205C Air Purifiers
IQAir HealthPro Series Air Purifiers Airfree Air Sterilizers IQAir HealthPro Compact Air Purifiers Blueair 201 Air Purifiers with HEPASilent Filter

October 30, 2003   Posted in: Air Quality


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