Given the inevitability of climate change, improving indoor air quality might be the single most effective thing we can do to benefit humanity, both in our country and the developing world. Kids especially seem really sensitive to bad air, with lasting developmental effectshttps://twitter.com/aaronrutkoff/status/1414942667809636361 …
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One great gift covid gave us at the beginning was a chance to see what the world looks like with clean air. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanplh/article/PIIS2542-5196%2820%2930201-1/fulltext …pic.twitter.com/1hgmM6O37v
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I think it was Belgium installed CO2 monitors in buildings - it's an excellent idea
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They have CO2 monitors in every closed door room in our building in Prague, and by law you can leave the building over some threshold (That applies to high/low temps as well). No, I don't recall what the threshold is off the top of my head ;)
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I can't keep up with drug terminology. "Cognitive bump" is a new one.
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seriously wonder about the impact of high CO2 levels in classrooms. (but you know the Yahoo conference rooms must have been like 5,000 ppm)
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Scrubbing indoor CO2 actually sounds pretty appealing; have you run across resources for the enterprising homeowner?
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