Five Fantastic Easy Tips to Detox Your Home and Lower Toxin Exposure

You eat healthy foods, you exercise and if you have children or pets, you’ve babyproofed or animal proofed your home. All excellent actions. But what about making your home a safer place from toxins? And what is the best way to lower toxin exposure? We’ve tapped into the wisdom of our expert host and speakers for our Institute for Natural Medicine Low Toxin Living Housecall video series to find out how to detox your home and your life.

Home cleaning product recipe to lower toxin exposure
  1. Throw out chemical cleaning products and replace them with household cleaners made from natural ingredients. Nature has its very own list of disinfectant ingredients that don’t need to be made in a chemical laboratory. And, Dr. Christian Gonzalez explains in this video, don’t believe everything you read on product labels, some cleaning product brands products use “green washing” labels and terms, meaning they are wanna-be-products, but are not actually safer for you or the environment. For a list of approved green cleaning brands, check out the Environmental Working Group’s guide to safe cleaning products here.

Or, if you prefer, try this simple and affordable recipe for a surface cleaner and disinfectant. Natural household cleaner recipe: mix in a 12-ounce spray bottle: ½ cup white vinegar, 2 Tablespoons baking soda, 30 drops of an essential oil with disinfecting properties, such as cinnamon, eucalyptus, lemon, oregano, peppermint, thyme.

  • Get rid of your old couch or replace the cushions. Replacing an old couch or just the cushions with a new fill that is free of flame retardants can significantly lower toxin exposure. A study from the journal Environmental International reports that when people replace their old couch or cushions with new ones that have no added flame retardants, the levels of the harmful chemicals in household dust drop significantly.

“We’ve long suspected that couches are a major source of toxic chemicals in dust. Now, for the first time, we have evidence demonstrating the positive impacts of replacing old furniture containing flame retardants,” says lead author Kathryn Rodgers, a research scientist at Silent Spring Institute. If you wait until after June 25, 2021, all new sofas will be free of flame retardants. Under a new federal bill, all upholstered furniture imported or sold in the United States will not contain flame retardants.

  • Switch to glass and stainless food and water storage containers. As you will hear in the video with Joe Pizzorno, ND, plastics are everywhere, including can linings, clothing, bottles and food storage containers. In the past, the emphasis has been to remove Bisphenol A (BPA) in plastics because they disrupt the body’s endocrine system, which can contribute to cancer, thyroid, obesity, reproductive and neurological health risks in adults and children.

However, when BPA was banned, more than 50 other chemicals like bisphenol S and bisphenol F were introduced. No one is certain about the health effects of these new plastics. As Dr. Pizzorno discusses in this video, they may be as or more damaging to health than BPA. The only way to reduce exposure is to avoid plastic food packaging and storage containers by switching to glass and stainless.  

While you may not have control of the quality of your home drinking water, you can reduce your exposure to lead, arsenic and other unwanted toxins by investing in a water filter. There are whole house systems, filters for showers and affordable water pitchers get rid of harmful toxins that may be in your water. We like this independent water filter review from Popular Mechanics magazine.

  • Filter the air in your home. We are all spending more time indoors, which means that home air quality may need to be adjusted to clean it up. Change your air filters often and use the thickest filter your furnace can accommodate. Consumer Reports has a good guide here. We also have a quick and inexpensive hack from Paul Perscu, ND to clean the air in your home using a household fan (click here).

Lastly, remember that toxins linger everywhere. Our bodies are equipped to help rid our blood, cells and tissue from many toxins. However, as Dr. Christian talks about, the routes and organs our body uses to detoxify become overburdened. The science is unquestionable, illness may occur from over exposure to heavy metals, air pollutants and cigarettes, fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides and even constant unrelenting stress. Naturopathic doctors are specially trained to detoxify the body of specific toxins, however this is a very complex process that takes a very long time to repair. It’s best to avoid the toxin in the first place.


Here are more resources on the role of naturopathic medicine to detoxify, reduce the risk of illness and lower toxin exposure.

INM Low Toxin Living Video Series

In this Institute for Natural Medicine Housecall Video Series, Low Toxin Living, naturopathic doctors offer advice on ways to reduce toxins in your life and how toxin exposure can lead to illness. It’s an important topic, please have a notebook nearby to take notes. There is a lot of good information you won’t want to miss.

CLICK HERE FOR ACCESS TO PART ONE WITH CHRISTIAN GONZALEZ, ND

CLICK HERE FOR ACCESS TO ALL VIDEOS: LOW TOXIN LIVING


Joe Pizzorno, ND: How Toxins Cause Disease  

Highlights: “When you are very toxic and desperately need to detoxify, it’s harder to do than when you are not toxic. In other words, just when you need your detox systems most (to address health issues), your hard-working detox system is most likely to be functioning below par. Why? Because the heavy toxic load you already carry has overwhelmed your detox capacity. That’s right. The more toxins you have burdening your body, the greater the damage to your body’s detoxification pathways.”

How do Naturopathic Doctors Treat Toxic Exposure?

Highlights: “Naturopathic doctors understand that no two people are alike due to genetic biochemical individuality. Based on this principle and utilizing a patient-centered approach, naturopathic doctors evaluate how each person’s environmental exposure may be influencing their foundations of health. In addition to toxic load, an ND evaluates genetic variations, nutrient deficiencies, stressors, dietary choices, microbiome status, vitality, and associated conditions that may influence how a patient responds to toxins.”     

Against All Odds: Sarin Gas Led Nora Abbas to Become a Naturopathic Physician

Highlights: When Nora Abbas was in high school, she was ordered to move away from her home on the small island of Bahrain in the Persian Gulf. Her mother, a teacher, stayed behind during the civil war called Arab Spring. Within two months, Nora got a very scary phone call. Her mother was very ill in the ICU from exposure to sarin gas. The experience prompted Nora to go to school to study to become a naturopathic doctor to learn to heal people like her mother. Read this amazing mother-daughter story about perseverance, courage and love.

The post Five Fantastic Easy Tips to Detox Your Home and Lower Toxin Exposure appeared first on Institute for Natural Medicine.

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