http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2005-04-04-air-filters_x.htm
Ionizing air cleaners get zapped
By Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY
Popular and expensive ionizing air cleaners — a staple of
late-night infomercials — could expose users to lung-damaging levels of ozone,
and they do a poor job of actually cleaning the air, according to a study in the
May issue of Consumer Reports.
The magazine tested six popular ionizing cleaners and one
HEPA (high-efficiency particulate air) filter. It found that two of the ionizing
cleaners emit 150 to 300 parts per billion of ozone in samples taken 2 inches
from the machine, while three other ionizing cleaners are in the 26-to-48-ppb
range.
The Environmental Protection Agency's standards for outdoor
ozone concentration exposure is 80 parts per billion over eight hours.
"Anyone who has respiratory problems might think, 'The
closer I get this thing to my head while I'm sleeping, the better.' Those people
will be exposed to relatively high levels of ozone, which is not a good thing,"
says Mark Connelly, the magazine's director of testing.
"In normal people, exposure to ozone levels of 100 parts
per billion causes injuries to the airways," says Dean Sheppard, director of the
Lung Biology Researcher Center at the University of California-San Francisco.
"It also produces an effect in the airways of normal people that's like what you
see in people with asthma: shortness of breath and wheezing."
Studies by researchers at UCSF and Yale University also
have shown that even small increases in ozone are associated with reduced lung
function and increased mortality rates.
Casey Fisher, president of Surround Air, which makes one of
the models on Consumer Report's "not recommended" list, disputed the
results and says tests conducted by "an independent lab prove that the ozone
level produced by the XJ-2000 is well beneath safety standards at as close as 1
foot away, and even less."
The magazine found that five of the six ionizing cleaners
don't clean very well. "They were all ineffective in removing pollen, dust and
smoke from air," says Jeff Asher, the magazine's technical director.
Robert Padgett of Brookstone says its Pure Ion air cleaner
has "one of the highest clean-air delivery rates of any product in its class,"
according to independent tests.
Doctors don't recommend air filters for patients with
allergies and asthma, says Sheppard. Animal dander especially isn't readily
removed by such filters because it gets caught in furniture or rugs, he says
But more than 80% of air cleaners are purchased become
someone in the home has asthma or allergies, magazine editor Robert Markovich
says. And ionizing air cleaners account for about 25% of the roughly $410
million Americans spend on air cleaners each year.
There is no government oversight over ionizing air
cleaners. If the product is not making a medical claim, it doesn't fall under
the Food and Drug Administration's jurisdiction, spokeswoman Julie Zawisza says.
The EPA would require congressional authority to set indoor
air standards, spokesman Dave Ryan says. However, the agency's Web site warns of
the adverse effects of even a relatively small amount of ozone.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is reviewing
scientific literature on the effects of ozone-generating air cleaners. It
expects to complete its study this fall, spokesman Steve Forde says.
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