Household toxins? Look no further than your kitchen  cabinets.  
It's official: Staying home is hazardous to your health.  Toxins found in the home injured 789,000 Americans between 1992 and 1995, and  new research suggests that this figure is underestimated.  
"Toxins in U.S. homes now account for 90 percent of all  reported poisonings each year," says Ross Ann Soloway, administrator of the  American Association of Poison Control Centers. That's an epidemic of hazardous  living by any standard. And while these figures include everything from  non-fatal aspirin overdoses to the deadly consumption of drain cleaners, they  fail to include long-term exposure to toxins like lead and asbestos.
To address the climbing domestic injury rates associated with  household toxins, Congress and the Centers for Disease Control in 1992 created  the Unintentional Injury Center to focus on the health dangers of consumer goods  and modern home living. Other federal agencies are following suit. The EPA now  has branches which deal with home indoor air quality, lead exposure and  ubiquitous low-level toxicity, and the Department of Housing and Urban  Development publishes a pollution look-out list for first-time home buyers.
The short list of toxins under your roof may surprise  you:
Formaldehyde offgasses (evaporates) from cushions,  particleboard and the adhesives used to manufacture most inexpensive wood-based  products. Carpets and carpet cushions may also offgas formaldehyde, causing eye  and upper respiratory irritation. According to the EPA, formaldehyde may even  cause cancer;
Radon is the second-leading cause of lung cancer in  the United States, warns the Surgeon General. Radon is a natural radioactive gas  that can seep into homes through cracks in the basement, the surrounding  foundation and in well water. It enters the body quietly through the  airways;
Lead keeps epidemiologists returning to the drawing  board, says Soloway, "mostly because we know more now about the adverse effects  of low-level exposure." Levels once thought to be acceptable are now known  contributors to learning disabilities and behavioral problems. Lead is found in  paint in older houses, old plumbing and soil near highways and busy roads. It  causes neurological and kidney damage, high blood pressure, disrupted blood cell  production and reproductive problems; 
Carbon monoxide will kill an estimated 660 Americans  this year. Don't look for exhaust fumes in the attached garage; the biggest  culprit is the unserviced furnace burning propane, butane or oil; Arsenic is  still lacing many household pesticides and is increasingly used as a wood  preservative. Low levels of inorganic arsenic "may cause lung cancer risk,"  according to the CDC. The Department of Health and Human Services agrees, adding  arsenic compounds to the list of unknown carcinogens;
Vinyl chloride is the source of "new car smell": The  plastic interior of a new car offgasses this known carcinogen. Water sitting in  PVC pipes overnight may also be steeping into a toxic tea. Very large exposures  can lead to "vinyl chloride disease," which causes severe liver damage and  ballooning of the fingertips;
Hydrofluoric acid "can cause intense pain and damage  to tissues and bone if the recommended gloves happen to have holes in them,"  says Soloway. This highly corrosive substance is the active ingredient in many  household rust removers.
But even the most liberal list of known toxins pales next to  the order of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). VOCs comprise hundreds of  natural and man-made, carbon-based agents. They react quickly with other  carbon-based compounds, and evaporate easily, making them ideal solvents. VOCs  can be found in disinfectants and pesticides, too. 
Solvents: Benzene and methyl ethyl ketome traverse  cell walls unchecked by normal cell defense. Both are known carcinogens. Cousins  toluene, xylene, 1,1,1-trichloroethane and trichloroethylene make up the lion's  share of the solvent market;
Disinfectants: Phenols, which include biphenyl,  phenolics and the preservative pentachloraphenol, are found in disinfectants,  antiseptics, perfumes, mouthwashes, glues and air fresheners;
Pesticides: Chlordane, aldrin, dieldrin, though all  banned for nearly two decades, continue to show up airborne in older  houses.  
Don't be a statistical figure on the CDC's tracking list: Be  aware of what substances, from pesticides to cleaners, pose threats in your  household. Maintain ingredient awareness. Many poisonings still occur because of  product combinations, like the ammonia-chlorine bleach reaction, which produces  the deadly respiratory irritant chloramine (a problem labeling practices have  not addressed).  
Replace toxic agents with non-toxic alternatives. Above all,  educate your household to reduce risk and exposure. For practical ideas on  reducing your family's risk, consult the following books: "Living Healthy in a  Toxic World" by David Steinman and R. Michael Wisner (Berkeley, 1996); "Toxins  A-Z: A Guide to Everyday Pollution Hazards" by John Harte, Cheryl Holdren,  Richard Schneider and Christine Shirley (University of California, 1991); "Home  Safe Home: Protecting Yourself and Your Family from Everyday Toxics and Harmful  Household Products" by Debra L. Dadd (Putnam, 1997).
