Protectair your School or Kindergarten

Clean Air for Teachers and Students
Australia is behind in addressing indoor air quality (IAQ) in our schools and kindergartens. Dozens of studies (reported by the EPA, the CDC, the American Lung Association, the American Asthma and Allergy Foundation, researchers and medical schools worldwide) have described the serious and increasing toll airborne pollutants take on the health and classroom performance of students and teachers alike. The damage ranges from significant increases in sick days to an inability to concentrate on the lesson at hand. As a matter of fact, the Environmental Protection Agency has reported that Asthma, which is many times triggered by poor indoor air quality, is responsible for more than 14 million sick days each year.

Protectair services will eliminate all contaminated pollutants from the classroom air conditioner, helping reduce a variety of pollutants and allergens. Protectair will create a healthy, comfortable environment for learning.

Protectair services offer an effective, efficient and low-cost solution that will benefit classrooms in new and old buildings. In many schools, the savings in the first year could be substantial. Utilising Protectair services to clean up the classroom air conditioner will provide substantial benefits that cleaner air can potentially create including:
  1. Reduced symptoms of allergies and Asthma
  2. Cleaner classrooms with less dust on surfaces and in computers
  3. Lower medical costs for teachers and students
  4. Fewer missed teacher days, lowering costs
  5. Fewer missed student days, lowering costs for office visits and medicine
  6. Lower energy costs for heating and cooling
  7. Better performance on learning and testing activities

Why air pollutants harm kids

The effects of air pollution take a harder toll on children than adults for three main reasons:
  1. First, children’s airways are small in diameter, meaning a pollutant that only slightly irritates an adult’s airway can significantly irritate and narrow the airway of a child. This can produce wheezing, reactive airway disease (hypersensitivity to allergens), or asthma.
  2. Second, because children are more active and have much more active metabolisms than adults, they take in more air relative to their size than adults do. They breathe more rapidly, and inhale more pollutants per pound of body weight.
  3. And third, children’s lungs are still growing (their lungs don’t reach maturity until about age 20). Repeated exposure to air pollution and repeated bouts of asthma can limit the growth of a child’s lungs and predispose them to chronic lung disease.



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