Decades of well-established research have linked nitrogen dioxide, or NO2, to respiratory conditions such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, which especially affect children and older adults. This harmful link is so well established that some states have begun banning gas appliances in new construction. And now a new study has shown in stark detail just how long and far this gas spreads and lingers in a home.

By sampling homes across the U.S., the researchers found that in many, levels of exposure to NO2 can soar above the World Health Organization’s one-hour exposure limit for multiple hours—even in the bedroom that is farthest from the kitchen.

"The concentrations of NO2 we measured from stoves led to dangerous levels down the hall in bedrooms … and they stayed elevated for hours at a time.

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments View context
7 points

For a lot of it, but sadly NO2 is heavy and sinks in the air so residential hoods don’t exhaust it well

permalink
report
parent
reply

Danger Dust

!dangerdust@lemmy.world

Create post

A community for those occupationally exposed to dusts, toxins, pollutants and hazardous materials

Dangerous Dusts , Fibres, Toxins, Pollutants and Occupational Hazards

#Occupational Diseases

#Autoimmune Diseases

#Silicosis

#Cancer

#COPD

#Chronic Fatigue

#Hazardous Materials

#Kidney Disease

#Pneumoconiosis

and more

Please be nice to each other and follow the rules : []https://mastodon.world/about

Community stats

  • 523

    Monthly active users

  • 657

    Posts

  • 289

    Comments

Community moderators