TOXIC FUMES AT HOME: GAS STOVES & OTHER INDOOR GAS EXPOSURES

This year we had multiple investigations from Consumer Reports, The New York Times, and Stanford University highlighted how gas stoves and indoor gas combustion appliances release nitrogen dioxide (NO₂), carbon monoxide, benzene, and ultrafine particles — all linked to asthma, heart stress, and hormonal disruption. A 2024 Stanford-led study measured toxic benzene spikes equal to secondhand smoke from 20–30 cigarettes during cooking periods with gas appliances indoors.

This seminar examines how constant low-grade exposure to these household fumes triggers inflammation and chronic fatigue — and how natural ventilation, other heating methods, detox practices, and root-cause approaches to inflammation can help the body recover when our homes become toxic without us noticing.


These statement have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. Products or services at Gilead Balm are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.