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The Dust Mite Carpet and Indoor Air Quality
Allergies and Asthma Healthy Carpet and VOCs
New Carpet Steps to Improve Indoor Air Quality
Older Carpet Routine Carpet Maintenance


For more information on how we can help provide a clean
and healthy environment, please see our cleaning system.  


The Dust Mite
dust mite; pictured here is one of the two million dust mites that infest the average home. They hide in your carpet, upholstery,  drapes, mattress and pillows. Mites can double in numbers in less  than 10 hours, and produce between 10 and 20 pieces of feces per
day. That is 100,000 dead bodies, and 30 million pieces of feces  added to your home every day. Microscopic mite feces and corpses are small enough to be airborne 
and get into your lungs. Eighty percent of the 11 million Americans  who suffer from allergies are allergic to airborne mite refuse. How bad is it? Well, one tenth of the weight of a 2-year-old pillow is dust mite  feces. Your home is a dust mite nursery, and you could be swimming in their unhealthy mire.
Dust Mite Image
 

Allergies and Asthma
Dr. Thomas Platts-Mills, head of AllergicMedicine at the University of Virginia Medical School, estimates that somewhere between 500,000 
and a million hospital visits are made each year by patients allergic to biocontaminants such as fungi, mites, and bacteria. 

The average person spends 90% of their time indoors. Worse, recently 
the EPA put into the Congressional Record the fact that indoor air is more polluted than outdoor air. Americans areliterally giving themselves and their children lifelong allergies with our disgusting indoor air. Every time you walk into your house, you bring lots of pollutants in with you--pollens, chemicals, soil,tar, dirt, car exhaust, cigarette smoke, and thousands of other things. Then you shut the door, and these pollutants have nowhere to go except where gravity takes them--into your carpet!

Dr. Michael Berry of the EPA states that 
"Carpeting and fabrics not cleaned and 
properly maintained have the potential 
to cause a variety of health problems 
inside the building environment."
 

Carpet and Indoor Air Quality
Carpet cleanliness can affect indoor air quality. Indoor air quality, 
a growing government and customer concern, is forcing contract cleaners
o focus on health as well as appearance.

When properly maintained,carpet can improve indoor air quality, acting as a filter to hold soil, debris and other contaminants, and preventing them from becoming airborne.

Regular vacuuming helps keep indoor air cleaner and  extends carpet life. Vacuums have improved via stronger and better suction and use of filters that trap dirt down to 0.3 micron (a micron is one-millionth of a meter). It is equally important to regularly clean or replace vacuum filters to ensure efficiency.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) also recognizes the 
effect of regular carpet cleaning on indoor air.  Extraction cleaning is
the most effective way to remove soil.
 

ROUTINE CARPET 
MAINTENANCE INCLUDES:
  • Controlling the spread of dirt 

  • with entry mats.
     
  • Vacuuming with proper filtration 

  • and microfilter bags.
     
  • Immediate spot removal.

  •  
  • Regularly scheduled wet cleaning or 

  • extraction for total soil removal.


* Source: U.S. Environmental 
              Protection Agency

 

Healthy Carpet and VOC Hazards
Over the last several years, questions have been raised about the  potential role of carpet in the expression of various human health effects. 
These have fallen into two general areas-

1) exposure to volatile organic compounds (VOCs) emitted from new carpet.

2) exposure to bioaerosols from older carpet.

When the earliest allegations of adverse health effects were made on exposure to new carpet in the early 1980s, there was relatively little data available on VOCs. Since that time, the technology for acquiring VOC emissions has matured and has been applied extensively to carpet and a number of other interior furnishing products. The specific VOCs from a variety of these products have been identified, and the resultant risk assessments indicate that significant health effects are not expected from these exposures.
 

About VOCs

Note that other materials typically used
with carpet,such as pad or adhesives for 
commercial installations, will contribute 
some VOCs to the air. 

If low-VOC-emitting products are desired,
look for the Carpet & Rug Institute IAQ 
testing label.

 

New Carpet
Today, we know that new carpet is one of the lowest-VOC-emitting products used in the indoor environment.Some carpets do have character- istic odors that some people have found objectionable; however, the carpet industry has actively worked over the last few years to dramatically reduce odors from new carpet.
 

Older Carpet
The potential health impact of bio aerosols from older carpetsis a newer issue for the carpet industry and is discussed in detail below.

For older carpet, the area of concern is airborne suspension of irritants or allergenic material  that either grows or accumulates in the carpet over time. With regard to the growth of microorganisms in carpet, we know that this does not occur to any significant extent at a relative humidity below 65% or in the absence of water leaks. In situations where humidity is high or water has intruded into the building, the potential for mold growth is greater regardless of flooring material. While biological debris can accumulate in carpet, it has been argued that carpet may actually be a benefit, since it traps and holds soils and dusts. 

Note that these soils are either tracked or blown into the building regardless of flooring type. Obviously, it becomes necessary to routinely remove this debris from the carpet via vacuum cleaning and periodic deep cleaning. Attempts to generate more comprehensive data regarding the precise role of carpet with respect to airborne particulates are under way; however, the studies to date indicate dust particle levels over carpets and hard surface flooring are closely related to outdoor levels of particles rather than flooring type.
 

Resource DuPont 2000
 

Steps to Improve Indoor Air Quality:
  • Ventilate the space well during and following renovations to reduce VOCs and odors.

  •  
  • Prevent soils from entering the building by keeping walks and drives swept.

  •  
  • Utilize walk-off mats near entryways.

  •  
  • Routinely clean all surfaces: dust, vacuum and damp mop. Note: Use high-efficiency vacuum cleaner bags, and change mop water frequently.

  •  
  • Keep the ventilation system in good condition and with proper filtration.
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