To President Bush on World AIDS Day Huffington Post, NY - So, Mr. President, when you leave office, get to work. Break the Republican ex-Presidential mold. Don't waste your days golfing and making speeches for a ...
Cancer fighters: A look at foods that can help you stay healthy Evansville Courier & Press, IN - Generally speaking, the fewer ingredients on the label, the better the food will be for you. It's not just for the twigs and berries crowd any more. Health...
Banking on the future Augusta Chronicle, GA - Being in the south really didn't fit that mold. I did have some desire to do medicine when I first went to college, but then just didn't have the mentality ...
Renters say their Clifton home is falling apart KJCT8.com, CO - They breathe in the mold while taking a hot shower and they say you can smell it coming through the floors. And the paint in the bathroom just chips right ...
NASA ISS On-Orbit Status 1 December 2008 Space Ref (press release) - ... can also detect yeast, mold, and gram positive bacteria, identify environmental contaminants, and perform quick health diagnostics in medical clinics. ...
How Healthy is Your Home? PitchEngine (press release), WY - It conducts allergen evaluations for dust mites, mold, pollen and dust particles as well as water and bacteria evaluation in bathrooms and kitchens. ...
How Thermography can save your life The Freeport News, Bahamas - I guess it is just too hard to break an old mould that produces a multi billion-dollar business. Consequently, most Health Insurances refuse to reimburse ...
Joblessness a double blow for immigrant family Toronto Star, Canada - In the factory, he says, "you do the same thing every day so you hear the same word again and again." The language of the shop floor: mould cavities, ...
Source: Google News
Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: health tips + house mold + mold Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)
International Olympic Committee Basil & Spice, FL - Aug 4, 2008 The Home Guide for Families with Allergies and Asthma, and The Mold Survival Guide: For Your Home and For Your Health, (Johns Hopkins Press). ...
Tips on keeping a house healthy DesMoinesRegister.com, IA - Jul 23, 2008 If you see mold in your house, there is no need for it to be tested. The first step is to find and repair the moisture problem, whether it is a leaky pipe ...
14 Tips for Health-Friendly Cleaning Reader's Digest, NY - Jul 31, 2008 They get wet most every day, and they often stay wet, making them a perfect home for mold. Automatic dishwashers. Take a close look at the edges of the door ...
Infection Prevention Tips for Flood Clean-up Infection Control Today, AZ - Jul 17, 2008 Prevent mold growth ? Clean up and dry out your home quickly (within 24 to 48 hours) to prevent mold growth. If you choose to hire a professional to do the ...
Tips to Avoid Mold from Record Floods KIMT, IA - Jul 9, 2008 Mold can be a health hazard and must be removed before the house can be lived in, added Dean Prestemon, retired ISU Extension wood products specialist. ...
Damp conditions provide a prime location for mold Defiance Crescent News, OH - Jul 15, 2008 According to the CDC, there are a variety of mold prevention tips individuals can follow to prevent potentially harmful fungi from building up in the home. ...
Program Assesses Hazards of Indoor-Air Quality in Homes RedOrbit, TX - Jul 21, 2008 People can reduce the amount of tracked-in pollutants, such as pesticides, pollen, and mold by placing commercial-grade doormats outside the entrances to ...
Tips On Avoiding Health Hazards After The Flooding 7thSpace Interactive (press release), NY - Jul 8, 2008 Systems should be checked before turning on to avoid blowing mold into all parts of your home. Throw away wet or water-damaged filters. ...
Filthy house in Salem not the norm, but not all that rare Eagle Tribune, MA - Jul 19, 2008 He said the stench of ammonia and mold growth posed an immediate risk to the health of the parents and five children, so he ordered them out of the home. ...
Police bust $500000 grow-op Brooks Bulletin, Canada - Jul 8, 2008 In addition to covered smoke detectors so humidity wouldn?t set off the alarms, black mold covers much of the home. ?The downstairs is a write-off. ...
Source: Google News
The medical effects of mold exposure - RK Bush, JM Portnoy, A Saxon, AI Terr, RA Wood - The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 2006 - Elsevier ... keywords Author eg js smith Search tips (Opens new ... of Medicine reports ?Damp indoor
spaces and health? 1 and ... to pollens, animal danders, and house dust mite ...
[PDF]Mold Remediation in Schools and Commercial Buildings - USEP Agency - Office of Air and Radiation, Indoor Environments Division. …, 2001 - moldlaw.info ... Consult health professional as appropriate throughout process Select ... In-house expertise
Outside expertise ... 4 Safety Tips While Investigating and Evaluating Mold...
Rigor, transparency, and disclosure needed in mold position paper - RC Shoemaker, H Ammann, R Lipsey, E Montz - The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 2006 - Elsevier ... Title, abstract, keywords Author eg js smith Search tips (Opens new ... of the science
on molds and human health; SC Redd ... July 18, 2002: US House of Representatives ...
Indoor mold spore exposure: a possible factor in the etiology of multifocal choroiditis - R Rudich, J Santilli, WJ Rockwell - American Journal of Ophthalmology, 2003 - Elsevier ... keywords Author eg js smith Search tips (Opens new ... of May, she moved out of the house
and into a ... 6] Some teachers continue to experience health problems, even ...
Q1: What is mold? C Committees, SR House, FAH Partnership, OGP Drive … - fpl.fs.fed.us ...mold and decay and gives tips for prevention ... Indoor Environments, which covers both health concerns and ... design, construction and operation.In-house experts have ...
The Perils of Indoor Mold E Stokstad - ScienceNOW, 2004 - sciencenow.sciencemag.org ... homeowner's nightmare: mold growing hidden inside a house. ... In response to growing
concerns over mold, the Centers ... the scientific evidence for health effects in ...
Children's respiratory health and mold levels in New Orleans after Katrina: A preliminary look - FA Rabito, S Iqbal, MP Kiernan, E Holt, GL Chew - The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 2008 - Elsevier ... keywords Author eg js smith Search tips (Opens new ... overall perception of their
children's respiratory health before and ... 17% were living in a house that flooded ... -
[BOOK] … Tips: A Workbook for Detecting, Diagnosing, and Eliminating Pesky Pests, Stinky Stenches, Musty Mold … JC May, CL May - 2008 - Johns Hopkins University Press
If while you're cleaning the house you find a suspicious dark spot, you can check to see if it's mold by dabbing the spot with a small amount of chlorine bleach. If the color changes or disappears, the stain is likely mold, says Health Canada.
If you do find mold:
Throw it out if the spot is on a blanket or rug.
If the spot is small, clean it by using one part bleach to four parts water and a small amount of a non-ammonia dishwashing detergent. Never mix chlorine bleach and ammonia.
Identify and remove the source of water. Leaking water can also lead to serious structural damage.
States Line Up for Anti-Flu Medication
WASHINGTON (AP) -- South Carolina is in. Utah and Alabama, too.
Some states aren't waiting for an Aug. 1 deadline to seek help from the federal government in buying anti-flu medicine for a possible pandemic.
"We figure it is certainly better to do it and move forward with the purchase and hope we never have to use it than not and wish that we had," said Jim Beasley, spokesman for South Carolina's Department of Health and Environmental Control.
As part of its pandemic preparations, the federal government is stockpiling Tamiflu and other anti-flu medications, which can reduce the symptoms associated with influenza. The Bush administration plans to buy enough to treat 44 million people.
States can buy more if they want. The government is negotiating a price with Roche Laboratories, Inc., which makes Tamiflu, and will pay a quarter of the costs, up to a prescribed amount for each state. In all, states could use the subsidy to buy anti-flu medications for an additional 31 million people.
The Department of Health and Human Services had set a July 1 deadline for states to indicate whether they would move forward with the purchase, but some states wanted more time, said spokesman Bill Hall. The deadline was moved to Aug. 1.
Hall stressed that the deadline does not obligate states to a specific course of action. Rather, it serves as guidance to HHS for its planning.
Montana and Arizona want only a little extra help. Meanwhile, states such as Washington say they plan to take full advantage of the next few weeks to determine the right amount of drugs to purchase.
"There's a lot to sort out with antivirals," said Tim Church, spokesman for the Washington state Department of Health. "It's not a black-and-white decision."
Oklahoma lawmakers this spring allocated $500,000 to buy anti-flu medications. That's enough to pay for enough medicine to treat about 35,000 of the state's 3.5 million people. But that's about 7 percent of the amount HHS estimates the state could purchase through the federal subsidy.
"We're struggling with how much do we need," said the state's epidemiologist, Dr. Brett Cauthen. "How much insurance do you need? Nobody knows what the best number is."
Other states also indicated they probably won't use their full allotment. Montana, population 918,000, plans to buy enough anti-flu medication to treat 8,100 people. It could have bought enough to treat about 96,000.
David Engelthaler, epidemiologist for the Arizona Department of Health Services, said the state had plans to spend $1 million on 70,000 courses of the 585,780 available to Arizona, population 5.6 million, but would talk to local health officials to see if more should be purchased.
Engelthaler said it wasn't prudent to use public money to stockpile Tamiflu for every man, woman and child. "It's not likely to be a good drug for general prevention like a vaccine would," he said.
Meanwhile, New Hampshire said it intends to purchase all the drugs that the federal government is making available to the state, as well as enough to treat nearly a quarter-million health care workers, first responders and nursing home residents.
"The department feels that, at this time, the prudent act would be to place the order, as a placeholder," state Health Commissioner John Stephen wrote in a letter to the governor and legislative officials.
Earlier, Dr. Jose Montero, state epidemiologist, said New Hampshire would not buy additional anti-flu medication unless the Legislature appropriated funds.
Other states also are taking advantage of the federal government's offer.
"We are authorized to buy as much as we can get by the governor," said Dr. Fred Jacobs, New Jersey's health commissioner.
New Jersey has told HHS it wants enough to treat about 900,000 people.
Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University's medical school, recommends that states have some anti-flu medication stockpiled in case of a pandemic. However, he said there's no right answer when it comes to just how much the states should have on hand.
"These are all insurance policies we're buying," Schaffner said.
How much insurance a state wants has to be weighed against other pressing matters, such as funding better education or roads, he said.
Schaffner said he does sense, however, than many states still rely too much on the premise that the federal government should fund pandemic preparedness.
"When it comes down to funding, that's when a lot of states are saying, gee, maybe it should all come from Uncle Sam," said Schaffner. "I think that's not a reasonable idea, and that's why we at Vanderbilt have made an investment in our own stockpile, and have invested substantially in drills and planning."
The federal government has made clear that it won't be able to protect everyone in a pandemic.
"Any community that fails to prepare with the expectation that the federal government will at the last moment be able to come to the rescue will be tragically wrong," said Health and Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt.
There have been three influenza pandemics in the United States during the past century. Officials fear that a virus in birds, the H5N1 virus, could mutate and spread from human to human. The World Health Organization reports that at least 229 people are known to have contracted bird flu since 2003, of which, 131 died.