A new study conducted by researchers from Stanford University’s School of Sustainability found that gas and propane stoves could pose a threat to consumers’ long-term health and wellness. Their ...
Cooking with gas-fired stoves can cause unsafe levels of toxics to accumulate inside homes, exposing people to roughly the same cancer risk as breathing secondhand cigarette smoke, according to a new ...
A new study of air pollution in U.S. homes reveals how much gas and propane stoves increase people's exposure to nitrogen dioxide, a pollutant linked to childhood asthma. Even in bedrooms far from ...
In a recent study published in Science Advances, researchers quantified indoor nitrogen dioxide (NO 2) emissions from gas and propane stoves and assessed their health impacts and demographic ...
Having a gas stove in your home is bad for your health, researchers have found, and it could kill thousands of people across the country every year. People living in homes with a gas or propane stove ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. A Stanford professor decided to give up his gas stove after seeing how much indoor pollution it creates. A ...
Nearly 40 percent of U.S. homes have gas stoves, which spew a host of compounds that are harmful to breathe, such as carbon monoxide, particulate matter, benzenes and high quantities of nitrogen ...
Twenty-two million Americans would no longer be breathing in unhealthy levels of nitrogen dioxide if they switched from gas and propane stoves to electric stoves. Robert Jackson and colleagues ...
When the blue flame fires up on a gas stove, there's more than heat coming off the burner. Researchers at Stanford University found that among the pollutants emitted from stoves is benzene, which is ...