Last updated: 2 Jun 2026 | 13 Views |
Jane, a 30-year-old first-time mom in Nakhon Pathom, moved into a new house two weeks before her son "New" was born. Every room had new furniture — crib, wardrobe, desk — all carrying that distinctive "new furniture smell."
"The first night home with New I smelled plastic mixed with particle board. My pediatrician told me newborns need clean air. I panicked that this smell could harm him."
New cried every 2 hours, breathed with a faint wheeze, and developed a red rash on his cheeks. The doctor recommended an indoor air test. Formaldehyde in the nursery measured 4× the safe limit.
New furniture, plywood, paints and glues off-gas VOCs — especially formaldehyde, which irritates airways and is a known carcinogen.
The US EPA notes indoor VOCs are typically 2-5× higher than outdoor air, especially in new homes.
Allergy Protection AP-907 emits zero ozone (a must for infants), uses True HEPA H13, plus activated carbon for formaldehyde and VOCs, and runs at 25 dB so it never wakes the baby.
Before: Formaldehyde at 0.12 ppm (above safe limit). Baby cried every 2 hours. Red rash on cheeks.
After 14 days with AP-907: Formaldehyde at 0.02 ppm (safe). Baby sleeps 4-5 hours straight. Rash gone. Mom sleeps deeply for the first time in a month.
"I never knew new furniture could be this dangerous. AP-907 turned everything around in days. My baby sleeps well. I bought another one for grandma's house." — Jane, Nakhon Pathom.
Q1: Truly safe for newborns?
A: Yes — zero ozone, no chemicals. Use from day one home.
Q2: How far from the crib?
A: 1-2 meters so air circulates without blowing directly on baby.
Q3: Overnight operation safe?
A: Designed for 24/7 use with auto cut-off.
Q4: Filter replacement for VOC removal?
A: 6 months in a new home, 12 months in older homes.
Q5: How many units in a baby's home?
A: One nursery + one living area covers the main areas.