Abstract

Air fresheners are pervasive within indoor built environments, such as workplaces, schools, housing, transportation, hotels, hospitals, care facilities, and a range of private and public buildings. Air fresheners are designed to impart an aroma to the air environment or to mask odors, with the intent of creating a pleasing indoor space. However, despite the intent, air fresheners can emit and generate a range of potentially hazardous air pollutants that can impair air quality. Even so-called green and organic air fresheners can emit hazardous air pollutants. Air freshener ingredients are largely unknown and undisclosed, owing to regulatory protections on consumer product ingredients and on fragrance formulations. In studies, fewer than ten percent of all volatile ingredients are typically disclosed on air freshener labels or material safety data sheets. From an indoor air quality perspective, air fresheners have been indicated as a primary source of volatile organic compounds within buildings. From a health perspective, air fresheners have been associated with adverse effects, such as migraine headaches, asthma attacks, mucosal symptoms, infant illness, and breathing difficulties. This article investigates the seeming paradox that products designed to improve the indoor environment can pose unintended and unknown risks. It examines the science, health, and policy perspectives, and provides recommendations and research directions.

Highlights

  • Air fresheners are pervasive within indoor built environments, such as workplaces, schools, housing, transportation, hotels, hospitals, care facilities, and a range of private and public buildings

  • From an indoor air quality perspective, air fresheners have been indicated as a primary source of volatile organic compounds within buildings

  • Air fresheners are consumer products that emit a fragrance to provide an aroma to a space, to mask an odor, or both

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Summary

10 Questions

Air fresheners are designed to impart an aroma to the air environment or to mask odors, with the intent of creating a pleasing indoor space. Despite the intent, air fresheners can emit and generate a range of potentially hazardous air pollutants that can impair air quality. Even so-called green and organic air fresheners can emit hazardous air pollutants. From an indoor air quality perspective, air fresheners have been indicated as a primary source of volatile organic compounds within buildings. This article investigates the seeming paradox that products designed to improve the indoor environment can pose unintended and unknown risks. It examines the science, health, and policy perspectives, and provides recommendations and research directions

What are air fresheners?
Where are air fresheners used?
What do air fresheners emit?
How do air freshener emissions affect the indoor environment?
How do air freshener emissions affect human health?
Do air fresheners disclose their ingredients?
Do emissions from “green” air fresheners differ from regular air fresheners?
What about involuntary exposure to air fresheners within indoor environments?
Findings
What are possible solutions or alternatives?
Full Text
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