Last updated: 5 Jun 2026 | 25 Views |
Mint, a 31-year-old marketing professional, lives in a condo in Bangkok's Lat Phrao district with her husband. She spent almost three months preparing a nursery for "Baby August," her first daughter — a custom white wooden crib, a star-shaped mobile, peach curtains she agonized over, and a nursing corner built around the fabric sofa she had owned since before her wedding. Everything looked like it came straight out of a home-decor magazine.
The first two weeks after bringing August home went smoothly. Then one morning Mint noticed small red rashes blooming on her daughter's cheeks. The baby sneezed three or four times every time she woke up, and began crying through the night even with a full tummy. "At first I thought it was a milk allergy or the detergent. I changed everything I could change — nothing helped," she recalls.
The pediatrician's diagnosis stopped her cold: the baby was likely reacting to dust mite allergens, accumulating day after day. And the highest-risk spots were not the brand-new crib, but the parents' six-year-old mattress and the old fabric sofa in the nursing corner — exactly where the baby spent hours every day.
Dust mites are microscopic arthropods just 0.1-0.3 millimeters long — invisible to the naked eye. They live in mattresses, pillows, blankets, sofas, and carpets, feeding on the skin flakes we shed. A mattress used for more than two years can harbor hundreds of thousands to millions of mites, and the most allergenic part is their droppings, which puff into the air every time you turn over in bed.
For a newborn whose immune system and airways are still developing, continuous exposure to dust mite allergens in the first year of life raises the risk of:
Mint's family spent more than 6,000 baht on doctor visits and creams in a single month, on top of repeated days off work for both parents and the grinding stress of a baby crying every night. "The most expensive part wasn't the medical bills," Mint says. "It was the guilt — we gave our daughter a beautiful room and forgot about the things we couldn't see."
Before finding the solution, Mint tried nearly everything the internet recommends:
Thailand's Department of Disease Control and the World Health Organization both identify indoor allergens — especially dust mites — as major triggers of allergic disease and asthma in children. Treating the root cause matters far more than managing symptoms with medication.
A colleague whose child has allergies introduced Mint to the complete dust mite removal, mattress, sofa and carpet cleaning service by World Health Disinfection (WHD) — the first full-service provider of its kind in Thailand. The team works with the Canadian-designed Sirena System, which combines water filtration with a HEPA filter to trap dust mites, droppings, and allergens in water with zero blowback into the room's air.
Baby August sneezed every morning, rashes spread across her cheeks and joint folds, and she woke up crying 3-4 times a night. Mint took leave almost weekly for doctor visits, spending over 6,000 baht a month. The six-year-old mattress had never been deep-cleaned even once.
Within the first week after the WHD team deep-cleaned the mattress, sofa, carpet, and curtains, the morning sneezing stopped. The rashes faded until the doctor reduced the medication. The baby now sleeps 5-6 hour stretches — and Mint saw with her own eyes the tank of brown, murky water the Sirena pulled out of "their" mattress.
"When I saw the tank water turn the color of mud — even though we wash our sheets every week — I was stunned. The team explained every step and worked so neatly. My daughter slept noticeably better from the very first night. We now book a regular session every 3 months." — Mint, Baby August's mom, Lat Phrao
Q: How long before the due date should we book dust mite removal?
A: Ideally about one month before delivery, covering the mattress, sofa, carpet, and curtains in the rooms where mother and baby will spend the most time.
Q: Is the service really safe for infants?
A: Yes. The core process relies on suction and water filtration without harsh chemicals, and the optional disinfection step uses hospital-grade solutions.
Q: How often should it be repeated?
A: Every 3 months for homes with infants, allergy sufferers, or pets; every 6 months for general households.
Q: How long does it take?
A: One bedroom with a sofa and carpet takes about 2-3 hours, and the room can be used immediately afterward.
Q: Can I buy a Sirena machine for home use?
A: Yes — see our dust mite vacuum machines page.
Let the World Health Disinfection team protect your family's bedroom with Thailand's first complete dust mite removal service.
Book Your Dust Mite Removal — Click Now
Call 065-556-6294 | LINE: @whd268
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Related: Sirena Dust Mite Vacuum | Disinfection Service | World Health Disinfection
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