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NFPA NEWS
For immediate
release
Contact:
Lorraine Carli
Public Affairs Office: +1-617-984-7275
publicaffairs@nfpa.org
NFPA study: Nearly all structure fire deaths happen in
home fires
Home fires cause annual average of 2,840 civilian deaths
May 25,2010 – According to a new study,
Home Structure Fires, from the
National Fire Protection Association
(NFPA), home fires account for 92 percent of fire deaths that
occur in structures. These fires cause an average of 2,840
civilian deaths each year.
“This study
strongly underscores the need to aggressively work to reduce the
number of home fires in this country in order to save lives from
fire,” said Lorraine Carli, vice president of communications.
During the
period of 2003-2007,
U.S. fire departments responded to
approximately 380,000 home fires a year. These fires not only
caused a large number of civilian deaths, they also caused an
average of 13,160 reported civilian fire injuries and $6.4
billion in direct property damage.
From 2003-2007,
smoking materials caused the largest number of fire deaths.
Heating equipment was the second leading cause of home fires and
home fire deaths.
The leading
cause of home structure fires, civilian fire injuries, and
unreported fires continues to be cooking equipment. Forty-one
percent of home fires started in the kitchen area and caused 15
percent of the home fire deaths and 36 percent of the reported
fire injuries.
Other key
findings include:
·
Reported home fires peaked
around dinner hours of 5:00 to 8:00 p.m.
·
Only 20 percent of the
reported home fires occurred between 11:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.,
however 52 percent of home fire deaths resulted from fires
reported during these hours.
·
Thirty percent of reported
home structure fires and 38 percent of home fire deaths occurred
in the quarter including December, January, and February.
·
Reported apartment fires were
more likely to start in the kitchen than fires in one- and
two-family homes.
·
The two leading items first
ignited in home fire deaths are upholstered furniture in 21
percent of home fire deaths, followed by mattress and bedding in
13 percent of the deaths.
Properly
installed and maintained fire protection can prevent most fire
deaths. Forty percent of fatal home fire injuries occurred in
properties where no smoke alarms were present. Home fire
sprinklers can also help, as the death rate per 1,000 reported
home fires was 83 percent lower when wet pipe sprinkler systems
were present, compared to reported home fires without automatic
extinguishing equipment.
“Smoke alarms
have been a key factor in significantly reducing the fire death
problem since their widespread use beginning in the ‘70s. The
move to require home fire sprinklers in new homes will be the
next step forward in fire protection,” said Carli.
The NFPA offers
these safety tips to prevent home structure fires from
occurring:
·
Stay in the kitchen while you
are frying, grilling, or broiling food. If you leave the
kitchen for even a short period of time, turn off the stove.
·
Keep anything that can catch
fire – oven mitts, wooden utensils, food packaging, towels or
curtains – away from your stovetop.
·
Keep anything that can burn,
such as paper, bedding, or furniture, at least three feet away
from heating equipment and have a three-foot “kid-free zone”
around stoves, open fires and space heaters.
·
Remember to turn off portable
heaters when leaving the room or going to bed.
·
If you smoke, smoke outside
using a deep, sturdy ashtray. Remember to make sure butts and
ashes are out, and dousing water or sand on them is the best way
to do that.
·
Keep matches and lighters up
high, out of children’s sight and reach, preferably in a locked
cabinet.
·
Install smoke alarms inside
every bedroom, outside each sleeping area and on every level of
the home, including the basement. Larger homes may require
additional smoke alarms to provide a minimum level of
protection.
·
For best protection, install
combination ionization/photoelectric smoke alarms or both
photoelectric and ionization alarms. Photoelectric alarms are
more responsive to smoldering flames and ionization alarms are
more responsive to flaming fires.
·
Smoke alarms with
non-replaceable batteries are designed to remain effective for
10 years. If the alarm chirps, warning that the battery is low,
replace the entire smoke alarm right away. For smoke alarms with
any other type of battery, replace batteries at least once a
year. If the alarm chirps, replace only the battery.
·
Test smoke alarms at least
once a month by pushing the test button.
·
Replace all smoke alarms,
including alarms that use ten year batteries and hard-wired
alarms, when they are ten years old or sooner if they do not
respond properly when tested.
·
Smoke alarm accessories are
available for people who are hard of hearing. These accessories
activate from the sound of traditional smoke alarms and produce
a complex low frequency alarm signal, more effective at waking
those with mild to severe hearing loss.
·
Smoke alarms and accessories
are available for people who are deaf. Smoke alarms and
accessories that use high intensity strobe lights and
accessories that produce a tactile (vibration) signal are now
required for those with profound hearing loss.
·
If you are building or
remodeling your home, consider installing home fire sprinklers.
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