Study Links Weekly Cleaning to Women’s Lung Damage Like Smoking Pack a Day

A 20-year study found women who regularly cleaned their homes lost lung function equivalent to smoking 20 cigarettes a day.

Yes — 20 cigarettes a day worth of damage, and only in women. Men showed no comparable decline. Why the huge gender gap?

Women use far more cleaning sprays, disinfectants, air fresheners, scented detergents, candles, and fragrance-loaded products — all containing volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and irritants that aerosolize and get inhaled deeply into the lungs.

Science nugget: The study (published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2018, based on the long-running European Community Respiratory Health Survey) tracked lung function (FEV1 and FVC) over 20 years in thousands of participants. Women who cleaned regularly (weekly or more) had accelerated lung function decline comparable to ~20 pack-years of smoking. No similar effect was seen in men, likely due to lower exposure to household cleaning chemicals.

The fix is simple and cheap: Switch to non-toxic alternatives — vinegar + water, baking soda, castile soap, hydrogen peroxide.

Ditch the scented sprays, “fresh linen” plug-ins, and harsh chemical cleaners.

Your lungs don’t regenerate like your liver. Damage accumulates for life.

You wouldn’t smoke a pack a day.

Why clean like you do?

Who’s switching their cleaning routine after this?

Watch video:  https://x.com/newstart_2024/status/2027787200742453719?s=20