By Insoo Park, CEO & Founder – Ecosense
When it comes to creating healthy spaces, most people think about diet, exercise, or medical checkups. Yet, the air we breathe inside our homes can quietly influence our well-being just as much as any of these.
One of the most significant (and often overlooked) threats is radon, a naturally occurring radioactive gas that seeps into homes through the ground. It’s invisible, odorless, and estimated to be responsible for 21,000 lung cancer-related deaths each year in the US alone. According to the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), radon is the leading cause of lung cancer diagnoses and deaths among non-smokers.
Our homes are meant to be sanctuaries — places where we feel secure and protected — but without realizing it, the environment inside them can sometimes expose us to unseen dangers. Everyday materials, weather changes, and the natural breakdown of soil beneath our foundations can all contribute to shifts in indoor air quality.
Understanding what’s in the air we breathe, particularly when it comes to long-term, cumulative risks like radon, is an essential part of safeguarding our families’ health.
Why continuous radon monitoring matters
Radon forms when uranium in soil and rock breaks down, releasing gas that can enter homes through cracks in foundations or gaps around pipes. Outdoors, radon disperses harmlessly into the atmosphere. Indoors, however, it can accumulate to levels that pose serious health risks.
What makes radon so dangerous is not just its presence, but its persistence. The gas doesn’t announce itself with a smell or a sound, and you can’t see it collecting in basements or crawl spaces. Plus, it’s not constant - radon levels are changing all the time: day and night, season to season. The only way to know whether your home is safe is to continuously monitor it.
From one-time radon testing to continuous insight
Traditional radon testing involves placing a device in your home for a few days or weeks, then mailing it to a lab for analysis to provide a snapshot of your home’s radon level. However, radon concentrations fluctuate based on weather, pressure, and seasonal changes, so what’s safe today may not be safe next month.
Continuous radon monitoring changes that approach. With new sensor technology, homeowners can now track their indoor radon levels in real time and receive instant alerts if concentrations exceed safe levels. With that approach, homeowners can spot seasonal radon fluctuations or even common nighttime radon elevations. Continuous monitoring empowers families to take timely action, providing the peace of mind that a single test cannot.
This type of real-time data does more than measure; it informs. By understanding how radon levels shift over days, seasons, or even hours, homeowners can recognize patterns and take preventative steps, such as improving ventilation or sealing foundation cracks — taking action to reduce their risk of radon-related lung cancer.
A national concern
Radon is not confined to a single region; it is found across the United States. The highest levels are typically detected in areas with uranium-rich soils, including parts of the Midwest, the Appalachian Mountains, and the Rocky Mountains.
However, every area and home is different, and even neighboring houses can have drastically different radon readings. That’s why the EPA recommends testing every home, regardless of location or foundation type.
While regular monitoring is essential for families in states like Iowa, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, and Colorado, where radon levels are known to be especially high, no homeowner should assume their home is immune. Radon doesn’t discriminate by zip code or construction style.
Health impacts that can’t be ignored
The relationship between radon and lung cancer is well established. When inhaled, the radioactive particles from radon’s decay process attach to lung tissue, damaging DNA and increasing the likelihood of cancer over time. The EPA estimates that radon causes roughly 21,000 lung cancer deaths each year in the US — a staggering figure for a hazard that is entirely preventable with awareness and technology.
For families, especially those with children or elderly members, long-term exposure poses an even greater concern. Continuous monitoring is not only about compliance but also about protection and prevention.
A smarter, healthier future
Health and safety are no longer about reacting to dangers but about anticipating them. Just as wearable devices have changed how we monitor our physical health, continuous environmental monitoring is changing how we protect the spaces where we live, work, and raise families.
Radon may be invisible, but the solutions are not. By embracing continuous monitoring and acting on data, homeowners can take control of their indoor environment and safeguard their loved ones from one of nature’s most silent threats.
Ultimately, the goal isn’t just to reduce risk but to build awareness. Because when more households understand the importance of ongoing environmental monitoring, communities as a whole become healthier and more resilient.
Every test, every data point, and every act of prevention brings us one step closer to ensuring that safety and health are not left to chance, but secured through knowledge and care.
– Based in the heart of Silicon Valley, Ecosense is a leader and trusted provider of radon-detecting and monitoring solutions that are easy to use, accurate, and fast. The company's smart real-time radon detectors utilize a patented detection technology with a high-accuracy performance, which delivers results in minutes, not days. The EcoQube was named one of the Top 100 Inventions of 2021 by TIME and is available for purchase on Amazon. Ecosense’s patented ion chamber technology performance has received independent validation from the University of Michigan (Dept. of Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Science) and the Kansas State University Radon Chamber. Both studies concluded that Ecosense’s patented technology performed comparably to premium research-grade detectors.
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