My Allergy Survival Kit: 5 Products Keeping My Itchy Eyes at Bay This Spring


Every spring, as much as I enjoy the blossoming of flowers and extra greenery, I dread their effect on me: a stuffy nose, red, itchy eyes and general sinus discomfort. As a seasonal allergy sufferer, this is sadly something I’ve become used to, but in the process, I’ve built an allergy toolkit of products that help me stave off my allergy symptoms and allergy-proof my home.

Despite seeing pollen on every sidewalk in my neighborhood this spring, and considering that May is usually the worst month for allergies, I haven’t had a single allergic reaction. I think the following products are the reason why.

1. Air purifiers

I’m such an air purifier fan that I currently have two, one in each of the high-traffic areas of my apartment: my bedroom and living room. When spring allergy season starts, I typically keep them running on low to continuously catch allergens and prevent them from entering my airways. I bump them up to high whenever my allergy symptoms are particularly bad, or there are wildfires in the area, as I live in Southern California.

The two I currently use and recommend are the Oransi Mod Air Purifier and Airthings Renew.

While I’ve always known that air purifiers can capture pollutants, mold spores, allergens and smoke, I had no idea that they could prevent illness by filtering out viruses, too. During CNET’s lab testing, we found the best air purifiers for exactly that purpose: the Shark HP232 on a low fan setting and the Coway Airmega 400S on a high fan setting.

Pro tip: Make sure you change your air purifier filter regularly, or else it could spit allergens and other contaminants back into the air you breathe.

The Oransi Mod air purifier up against a beige wall, white trim and on a gray wood floor.

The Oransi Mod air purifier, which I currently have running on low in my living room.

Anna Gragert/CNET

2. A robot vacuum

As someone who is allergic to both pollen and dust, keeping a clean home is essential. To get my floors spotless, I rely on help from my robot vacuum.

While it doesn’t have a HEPA filter to minimize particles that end up in the air during vacuuming, and is an older model no longer sold, my Ecovacs Deebot X1 Omni robot vacuum still gets dust and other particles off my floors, stopping them from getting stirred up into the air. Plus, its disposable dustbin prevents me from having to manually empty allergens into the trash, where I might also inhale them. 

To mitigate particles kicked up into the air while my robot vacuum is doing its thing, I always have my windows open or my air purifiers running.

Both the Mova V50 Ultra and the Ecovacs Deebot T80 Omni robot vacuums have HEPA filters.

3. Air quality monitors 

While my Airthings Renew air purifier has a built-in air quality light that glows green, yellow or red depending on PM2.5 particle (inhalable particles with diameters 2.5 micrometers and smaller) levels, my Oransi model doesn’t, so I rely on the Airthings View Plus air quality monitor in between my living room and kitchen to keep me up to date on the status of my air in that area. 

In addition to temperature, air pressure and humidity, View Plus tracks volatile organic compounds (VOCs, airborne chemicals), carbon dioxide (CO2), radon (a radioactive gas) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5).

I also have Airthings’s compact Wave Enhance air quality monitor in my bedroom. Since the brand’s Renew air purifier sensor only measures PM2.5 particles, I use the Wave Enhance to measure temperature, humidity, air pressure, CO2, VOCs, ambient noise and light to see how different levels may be impacting my sleep. 

All of my Airthings monitors connect to an app on my phone, where I set up notifications to alert me when my air quality drops and to provide tips on improving it. The app also has a pollen forecast that lets me know when it’s time to turn on my air purifiers, but you can easily check the pollen count online or by using other apps.

The Airthings air quality monitor on a beige wall.

The Airthings air quality monitor on the wall in between my living room and kitchen.

Anna Gragert/CNET

4. A customizable humidifier

Allergies can cause inflamed, irritated nasal passages, which can be soothed with the moisture released by a humidifier. Since my bedroom tends to be dry, this is an extra reason for me to use my Levoit OasisMist Humidifier

However — and it’s a big however — it’s essential to note that by increasing moisture, a humidifier can make your space hospitable to mold and dust mites, which are allergens. To mitigate this, the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology recommends keeping your home’s humidity between 40% and 50%. An air quality monitor or humidifier that allows you to set the humidity level, such as the Levoit model I have, can help you maintain this balance.

I’d recommend consulting your doctor or allergist to see if a humidifier is right for your specific needs. If it is, you’ll also want to ensure you regularly clean your humidifier and change its filter according to the manufacturer’s instructions. 

5. A saline nasal rinse

After a particularly awful sinus infection last spring, my doctor recommended that I use a saline nasal rinse when I notice allergy or illness symptoms, or when the pollen count is high. Specifically, she advised me to use the Arm and Hammer Simply Saline Nasal Care Daily Mist.

Allergy experts also agree that a saline nasal rinse can help prevent allergy symptoms. If nothing relieves your symptoms, speak with your doctor about allergy treatment, such as antihistamine tablets or a steroid nasal spray.

The Arm and Hammer Simply Saline nasal rinse bottle held by a hand in front of a white wall.

My trusty Simply Saline nasal rinse, which I use on high-pollen days and whenever symptoms arise.

Anna Gragert/CNET

The bottom line

Allergies are the worst. Plain and simple. But that doesn’t mean there’s nothing we can do to combat them. As a seasonal allergy sufferer, I can say that once I started using the aforementioned devices and products, my allergies became a lot more manageable. 

Now, I can actually enjoy the spring flowers instead of seeing them as the roots of my stuffy-nosed, itchy-eyed misery.





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Friday is the last day for your encrypted Instagram DMs. After May 8, the platform will no longer support the feature, it announced in a help post.

Instagram said in March that it would stop offering end-to-end encryption to its roughly 3 billion users worldwide. At the time, Meta said the feature, which required people on the platform to opt in, had a low adoption rate.

A Meta spokesperson told CNET that nothing has changed in its plans since that announcement and repeated a statement from March: “Very few people were opting in to end-to-end encrypted messaging in DMs, so we’re removing this option from Instagram in the coming months. Anyone who wants to keep messaging with end-to-end encryption can easily do that on WhatsApp.”

WhatsApp is also owned by Meta.

Read more: I Tried Signal, Telegram and WhatsApp, and This Is the One I’d Recommend

The change means that there’s no longer the option to keep private messages on Instagram shielded from potentially prying eyes. By default, if law enforcement agencies are given access to someone’s Instagram messages, there’s no encryption to prevent them from reading them. With the option enabled, Instagram users could keep messages private, with only the keys on their devices able to unlock them. However, anyone in an encrypted chat could also share messages with Meta if they were reporting an incident, or with anyone else if they chose. 

How to get your encrypted messages

According to the help page message, you’ll be able to download any encrypted messages you have: “If you have chats that are affected by this change, you will see instructions on how you can download any media or messages you may want to keep,” the company said. “If you’re on an older version of Instagram, you may also need to update the app before you can download your affected chats.”





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