A chemical linked to a higher risk of leukemia and other blood cell cancers can leak into homes when a resident uses their gas stove, according to a newly-published study – which adds to the growing ...
While the concentrations are low, the chemicals are potentially dangerous and some are linked to cancer risk, the researchers found. By Elena Shao The natural gas delivered to homes contains low ...
Cooking with a gas stove in your kitchen can emit as much benzene into a home as second-hand tobacco smoke, depending on ventilation and the size of the house, according to new research from Stanford ...
When the blue flame fires up on a gas stove, there's more than heat coming off the burner. Researchers at Stanford University found that among the pollutants emitted from stoves is benzene, which is ...
A gas stove doesn't have to be on to be leaking deadly benzene Editor at Large The U.S. goes through a lot of natural gas, consuming more than 30 trillion cubic feet of it last year, according to the ...
Gas stoves in California homes are leaking cancer-causing benzene, researchers found in a new study published on Thursday, though they say more research is needed to understand how many homes have ...
Using a single gas-stove burner can raise indoor concentrations of benzene, which is linked to cancer risk, to above what’s found in secondhand tobacco smoke and even to levels that have prompted ...