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HOW TO DECREASE EXPOSURE
TO The first step that needs to be taken on the road to recovery is to reduce your "Total Load". Every airborne and ingested allergen, as well as airborne irritants (perfumes, tobacco smoke, chemicals) add to your total load. Where is a good place to start? Concentrate on making changes in the areas of your environment that you seem to be most symptomatic. Since most people spend up to 90% of their time indoors, look for allergens in the areas in your work or home environment in which you spend most of your time. The bedroom is often an important place to make changes because it usually contains the highest level of dust mites. Pollens... Pollen comes from trees, grasses, and weeds on a seasonal basis. Exposure is not limited to outdoors because of infiltration and being carried indoors on pets, clothing and shoes.
Molds... Molds thrive in dark, warm, moist areas. Common sources of molds: Moist surfaces in the bathroom or kitchen, spills, roof leaks, windows sweating, plumbing leaks, pet accidents, deteriorating carpet, drapes or upholstery, inefficient filters allow dirt to accumulate on coils, drain pans, duct work, warm temperatures without air conditioning, trash compactors, garbage cans, drain pan in a frost-free refrigerator, worn clothes, leather, poorly ventilated closets, kitty litter, caged birds, basements, and bathroom and showers.
Dust mite... Dust mites inhabit bedding, upholstery, clothing, carpets, mattresses, stuffed animals.
Pets... Pet dander travels on the animal and everything it touches. Dander is light and stays airborne even longer than pollen.
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