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When Pam and David Mulligan bought a new home in Scottsdale three years ago, their first act before moving in was to open all the doors and windows and let the desert air circulate for two weeks.
Since then, they have remodeled the home piece by piece to replace potentially toxic surfaces with ones designed to improve indoor air quality.
They refinished the walls with pastel paint free of volatile organic compounds, the ingredients of ozone pollution. They tore out the synthetic living room carpet and replaced it with a slate floor installed with non-toxic sealant.
They sleep on organic cotton sheets, use natural cleaning products and hire an organic pest-control service to deal with the scorpions native to the hilly area.
The couple chose a health-conscious lifestyle based in part on David's job as chairman of the transplant division at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix.
As a surgeon, he says, he sees more liver and pancreatic cancer now than at any point in his 12-year career. Though there is no way to conclusively link exposure to environmental chemicals to tumors, he said he wants to limit his familys contact with toxic substances.
"We have to be conscious of what we're exposing ourselves to," he said. "I look at it as an investment in health."
Poor indoor air quality can have a variety of health effects. Asthma, allergies, respiratory problems and heart conditions can be aggravated. Chemicals can irritate eyes and throats. Extreme cases of radon or carbon monoxide contamination can lead to lung cancers and premature death.
Indoor air pollution affects the same people affected by outdoor pollution: children, the elderly and people with existing respiratory problems. Severe cases can trouble even healthy adults.
However, indoor air experts caution against alarmism.
"Though there are a variety of threats to indoor air quality, that doesn't mean they are all present in life-threatening quantities in your house. Indoor air just shouldn't be dirtier than the brown cloud outside," Denis said.
"The air in your house should be as good as outside," he said. "If you cant handle what is outside, you should move."
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