Indoor Air Pollution

Understanding

Indoor Air Pollution

The World Health Organisation has labelled indoor air pollution as 'the world's largest single environmental health risk.' We usually think of air pollution as being outdoors, but the air indoors too could be polluted.
Adverse health conditions due to indoor air pollutants could be experienced soon after exposure or possibly, years later.
Understanding and controlling common indoor air pollutants can help reduce health concerns.

Common Indoor

Air-pollutants​

We can encounter pollutants in almost all indoor spaces – from crowded lobbies, offices, shops, restaurants and gyms, to doctors' clinics, schools and universities. Carpets, air-fresheners, cleaning agents, organic matter, etc. all generate pollutants.
A few prominent pollutants are:

How Air-pollutants Impact Health

7 million people die every year from air pollution. Usually, indoor air pollution causes discomfort, wherein most people feel better as soon as they move out of the polluted space. But some pollutants can cause diseases that show up much later, such as respiratory disorders, viral infections, allergies, to name a few.

Why You Need an Air

Purification System

SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19/CORONA VIRUS) is transmitted by exposure to infectious respiratory fluids

The Relative Size of Pollutants

7 million people die every year from air pollution. Usually, indoor air pollution causes discomfort, wherein most people feel better as soon as they move out of the polluted space. But some pollutants can cause diseases that show up much later, such as respiratory disorders, viral infections, allergies, to name a few.
But just how small are some of these?

*um – micrometre, also called micron, metric unit of measure for length equal to 0.001 mm

patent-pending