Hire help
If you’re allergic to house dust or something else like pet dander that hides in your carpet, get someone else to take care of cleaning that carpet - a teenager or a professional cleaning service. The cost of a hired hand is a small price to pay for guaranteed escape from an allergic reaction.
Seal your bedding in plastic.
Ajoint communique from Dr. Podell and Dr. Lang: If dust mites are the bane of your existence, encasing your mattress and pillows in plastic will help bring relief. The little bugs love bedding, but with the plastic in place, you breathe clean air instead of mite wastes.
Throw out your carpets
For an allergic person sensitive to house dust, pet dander, or mold, carpets are an absolute no-no. They make an almost perfect home for dust mites and molds, and the tightly woven modem carpet very effectively attracts and holds pollen and pet dander. Even steam cleaning may not help. “It’s not hot enough to kill the mites,” Dr. Platts-Mills says. “About all it really does is make it warmer and wetter underneath -an ideal climate for both mites and mold.”
Buy throw rugs
Replace your carpets with throw rugs and you’ll achieve two major benefits. You’ll eliminate that part of your home that captures and holds more dust, pollen, pet dander, and mold than any other, and you 11 make keeping it allergen-free much easier. Rugs can be washed at temperatures hot enough to kill dust mites, and the floors underneath - courtesy of a rug’s loose weave - stay cooler and drier, conditions distinctly hostile to mold and mites. “Mites can’t survive on a dry, polished floor,” Dr. Platts-Mills says. “And that kind of floor dries in seconds versus weeks for a steam-cleaned carpet.”
Buy synthetic pillows. Dust mites like synthetic (Hollofil or Dacron) pillows just as much as those made from down and foam, but synthetic pillows have one major advantage-you can wash them in hot water.