Last updated: 4 Jun 2026 | 13 Views |
Every long school break, a two-storey wooden house that has stood for thirty years in Mae Rim district, Chiang Mai, comes back to life. The laughter of two grandchildren — seven-year-old Khao Pun and eleven-year-old Phupha, up from Bangkok for almost a full month — is the sound Grandpa Somsak and Grandma Boonmee wait for all year long.
Before every visit, Grandma prepares the house with painstaking care. She brings out the beloved kapok mattress she stuffed with her own hands three decades ago and lays it on the floor of the upstairs bedroom. She takes the old pillows the children have slept on since they were babies out of the wooden wardrobe. She unfolds the flower-print blankets packed away all year, hangs the same mosquito net the family has used since her son was a boy, and dusts off the fabric sofa in front of the television where three generations sit together every evening.
Everything is prepared with pure love. But this year, that love turned into a nightmare nobody in the family saw coming.
The first night, everything seemed fine. The two children chased each other through the longan orchard behind the house, devoured Grandma's khao soi, and fell fast asleep on the kapok mattress she had sun-dried for three days in advance. But deep into the second night, the silence of the orchard house was broken by little Khao Pun crying.
"Grandma... I'm itchy everywhere."
When Grandma switched on the light, her heart dropped. Angry red welts covered the little girl's arms, legs, neck and back. Both eyes were swollen and red. Her nose was streaming, and she sneezed in relentless bursts of five and six. She had scratched until her skin was raw. Phupha, the older one, was better off but still coughed dryly all night, so congested he had to sleep with his mouth open. By seven the next morning, Grandpa was driving both children to the clinic in Mae Rim town.
The doctor examined Khao Pun for a moment, then asked the question that changed everything. "Has she been sleeping on an old kapok mattress? Blankets stored in a wardrobe for months? This is atopic dermatitis triggered by dust mites, together with allergic rhinitis. A Bangkok child reacts strongly the moment she meets a concentrated dust mite reservoir like an old house."
He prescribed antihistamines and a steroid cream, but he was blunt: keep sleeping on the same bedding and the symptoms would return every night — and over time, untreated dust mite allergy in children can develop into full-blown asthma. His words confirmed the thing no one wanted to believe: the cause was the very house the family loved most.
Three days later, after Khao Pun's rash flared again despite taking every dose of her medicine, her parents made the painful decision to drive up and take both children back to Bangkok — almost three weeks ahead of schedule. The image of Grandma standing at the gate, waving with tears welling in her eyes, whispering to Grandpa, "Will the grandchildren even want to come back next year?" — that is the image their son says he watched in the rear-view mirror and will never be able to forget.
This is not just a health story. It is a story about family bonds. For grandparents in their seventies, hugging the grandchildren, cooking their favourite dishes, teaching them to climb the longan trees, and telling bedtime stories under the same old mosquito net — these are the greatest joys their later years have to offer. One month of school break is what they wait through the other eleven months of the year for.
But that year, the house that should have been a house of memories became, in the eyes of a seven-year-old, "the house that makes me sick." On the drive back to Bangkok, Khao Pun told her mother, "I don't want to sleep at Grandma's anymore. It makes me itchy." A short, innocent sentence from a child with no ill intent — yet it cut every adult in the family deeper than any blade could.
And then there was everything else that could be counted. Two rounds of doctor's fees and medicine. Fuel for an unplanned 1,400-kilometre round trip between Bangkok and Chiang Mai. Leave days burned with no notice. And the one cost no money can measure: the grandparents' guilt — the crushing belief that they had failed to look after their own home, when in truth they had done everything their generation knew how to do. Their enemy was simply invisible to the naked eye.
Dust mites are not insects, as most people assume. They are eight-legged arachnids — relatives of spiders — measuring just 0.1 to 0.3 millimetres, far too small for human eyes to see. They feed on the dead skin flakes and dander we shed every day, and they thrive in warm, humid, dark places: the heart of a mattress, the inside of a pillow, a folded blanket, a fabric sofa, a carpet, a curtain.
Here is the frightening part: the true allergy trigger is not the living mite itself but its droppings and decomposing body fragments, which are loaded with powerfully allergenic proteins. Inhaled or in contact with skin, they cause allergic rhinitis (the non-stop sneezing and runny nose), asthma, atopic dermatitis, allergic conjunctivitis with red itchy eyes, and chronic headaches. The World Health Organization (WHO) lists respiratory allergies among the most common chronic health problems in children worldwide, and Thailand's Department of Disease Control, Ministry of Public Health identifies dust mites as the number-one indoor allergen affecting Thai families.
So why was this particular grandparents' house hit so hard? Count the hotspots one by one. A kapok mattress in service for more than two decades — kapok is a natural fibre that holds moisture beautifully, making it a luxury condominium for dust mites. Old pillows that experts estimate can owe a meaningful share of their weight to accumulated mite carcasses and droppings. Blankets folded away in a dark, humid wooden wardrobe for an entire year, never once touched by sunlight. A fabric sofa in front of the TV that the whole family has sunk into every evening for thirty years without a single deep clean. And an old mosquito net, hung over the bed every night, quietly collecting dust and allergens and sprinkling them down directly over the upturned face of a sleeping child. Research has found that a single old mattress can host hundreds of thousands to millions of dust mites — which means little Khao Pun was, without anyone knowing, sleeping in the embrace of an invisible army all night long.
Do not mistake this for neglect — quite the opposite. Grandma Boonmee did everything traditional wisdom prescribes: she sun-dried, she beat, she washed. But the science says each of those methods has a major blind spot that most people have never heard of.
The fierce Chiang Mai sun in the hot season can indeed kill some of the mites on the surface. But dust mites are heat-sensitive and mobile: they simply burrow deeper into the thick kapok core where the heat never reaches, wait until sunset, and climb back up. More important still — the actual allergy trigger is the mites' droppings and carcasses, and solar heat does not break down those allergenic proteins. Even if every mite died, millions of allergen particles would remain embedded in the kapok exactly as before.
A grandmother beating a mattress in the midday sun is a classic image in every Thai household. But beating launches the featherlight mite droppings into the air as a cloud of allergens. The person doing the beating inhales it lungful by lungful — ever notice how Grandma always sneezes after airing the bedding? — and then most of the particles drift gently back down onto the very same mattress. All that effort for nothing, plus added risk for the one doing the work.
Washing in water hotter than 60°C genuinely kills mites on sheets and pillowcases, and it absolutely should be done weekly. But most household washing machines run cold cycles that mites survive comfortably. And even with a hot wash available — you cannot fit an entire kapok mattress, a whole pillow, a three-seat sofa, or a full mosquito net into a washing machine. The biggest, deepest reservoirs in the house had therefore never been touched once in thirty years.
This is the cruellest trap of all, because Grandpa's son had actually shipped a vacuum cleaner up to the house the year before. Ordinary bag-based vacuum cleaners have a serious flaw: ultra-fine particles like dust mite droppings slip straight through cheap dust bags and filters and are blown back out through the exhaust vent, spraying allergens across the entire room — sometimes leaving the air worse than before. The suction is also nowhere near strong enough to dislodge mites that grip the deep fibres with all eight legs. The problem was never the grandparents' diligence. The problem was that not a single tool in the house had been engineered for a war against dust mites.
Back in Bangkok that night, Grandpa's son could not sleep. The image of his mother in tears at the gate kept replaying in his mind. He picked up his phone and typed in every search phrase he could think of — "kapok mattress dust mites," "old house dust mites," "home dust mite removal service Chiang Mai" — until he landed on World Health Disinfection (WHD), Thailand's first comprehensive dust mite removal and disinfection service, operating on-site at homes nationwide, including Chiang Mai.
What made him stop scrolling and start reading carefully was technology unlike any vacuum cleaner he had ever encountered. WHD uses the Sirena System from Canada — a professional-grade dust mite extraction machine built around 100% water filtration working in tandem with a HEPA filter, driven by a 1,200-watt Italian cyclonic motor, capable of capturing particles as small as 0.02 microns — hundreds of times finer than a dust mite dropping. Every particle of dust, every mite, every carcass and every dropping is pulled down and trapped in water, visible to the naked eye, with not a single particle blown back into the room.
And crucially, none of this is marketing fluff. The Sirena System is certified by the Asthma Society of Canada as suitable for people with respiratory conditions, and it carries TUV Rheinland certification from one of the world's most respected testing and standards institutes, based in Germany. The entire process uses no chemicals whatsoever — which makes it completely safe for young children and elderly residents alike.
The next morning, he called 065-556-6294 and told the WHD team the whole story. They listened, walked him through what should be treated in an elderly couple's home, and he booked the home dust mite removal service for his parents in Mae Rim on the spot — a gift with one short message attached: "Next school break, the kids are sleeping at your house for the full month. I promise."
Two weeks before the next school break, the WHD vehicle pulled up in front of the old wooden house. The team walked through every risk point with Grandpa and Grandma, explaining each one patiently in plain language — two kapok mattresses, six pillows, every blanket in the wardrobe, the three-seat fabric sofa in front of the TV, the curtains in both bedrooms, the rug beside the bed, and the spare mattress stored underneath it. Then they set to work with the Sirena machine, deep-extracting each item square inch by square inch, a meticulous process that took most of the day.
The moment Grandpa remembers most vividly came when the team opened the machine's water basin after finishing the first kapok mattress. The water that had started crystal clear had turned a murky grey-black, thick with three decades of fine sediment. "I've been sleeping wrapped around this my whole life?" Grandpa muttered, shaking his head, while Grandma pressed a hand to her chest.
"Watching my daughter break out in rashes at my parents' house was awful. But what hurt more was seeing my mother standing at the gate in tears as we drove away early. I promised myself I would fix this. I booked WHD's home dust mite removal service for my parents in Mae Rim, and the team was outstanding — they explained everything to my elderly parents in simple terms, worked through every single item from the kapok mattress to the curtains, and even showed my father the water basin so he could see exactly what came out of his bedding. The next school break, my daughter slept at Grandma's house for all thirty days without a single spot on her skin. My mother called me in tears and said, 'Our house belongs to the grandchildren again.' That alone was worth every baht."
— Khun Kittipong (Grandpa Somsak's son), who booked WHD's dust mite removal in Chiang Mai for his parents in Mae Rim district
It is ideal for them. Kapok mattresses are among the worst dust mite reservoirs in any Thai home — they cannot be machine-washed, and solar heat never penetrates the core. The Sirena machine's 1,200-watt motor extracts deep into the kapok fibre, capturing live mites, carcasses and droppings through 100% water filtration plus HEPA, without damaging the mattress structure. The sentimental mattress your grandmother stuffed by hand stays safely in service.
Absolutely, and it has become one of our most popular ways to book. Simply call 065-556-6294 or message LINE @whd268 with your parents' address. The team will coordinate a convenient appointment directly with the elderly homeowners and travel to their door. It is a health gift that genuinely delivers your care across provinces.
Not at all. A core strength of the service is that everything is treated exactly where it lives — the mattress on the bed, the sofa in front of the TV, the curtains on their rails, the carpet on the floor. The team handles every item, and the elderly homeowners never lift anything heavy. For a house where only Grandpa and Grandma live, that matters enormously.
As safe as it gets, because the entire process uses no chemicals whatsoever — only the cyclonic motor's suction and the water + HEPA filtration system. The Sirena System is certified by the Asthma Society of Canada as suitable specifically for people with respiratory conditions, and it carries TUV Rheinland certification. Children and grandparents can return to their beds the moment the team finishes — no smell, no residue, no waiting.
A single deep treatment dramatically reduces mite and allergen levels immediately. For homes with allergy-prone children or older houses with decades of accumulation, we recommend repeating every 3–6 months, combined with day-to-day care using the complimentary CHEMGENE HLD4H spray (99.85% germ elimination within 1 minute, with protection lasting up to 14 days) and WELLGIENIC wipes included free with every service. Grandpa Somsak's family now books a session before every school break — so the house is always ready for the grandchildren.
Beyond dust mite extraction, Grandpa's family also planned complementary services to bring their thirty-year-old house up to a whole new standard of cleanliness and safety.
Book your home dust mite removal service today and make every homecoming a warm memory instead of rashes and tears. On-site service nationwide — Bangkok, Chiang Mai and every province in Thailand.
View our Dust Mite Removal Service – Click here
Call now 065-556-6294 | LINE: @whd268
Home dust mite removal service by World Health Disinfection — Thailand's first comprehensive dust mite removal and disinfection provider, powered by the Canadian Sirena System with 100% water filtration + HEPA capturing particles down to 0.02 microns, certified by the Asthma Society of Canada and TUV Rheinland. Because a grandparents' house should always be the place the grandchildren beg to come back to.
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