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October
2005 Safety Tip

Home
Fire Prevention and Preparedness
October
is National Fire Prevention Month
Home
Fire Prevention and Preparedness
Fires and
burns continue to be the third leading cause of unintentional injury
death at home. In 2002 alone, 2,200 people lost their lives in home
fires. Particularly at risk are the very young and the very old. Follow
the safety tips listed below to protect yourself and your family.
Smoke
Detectors
- One is definitely NOT enough!
Every home should be equipped with smoke detectors on every level, particularly
outside of sleeping areas.
- Test your smoke detectors
monthly and batteries are replaced twice a year.
- Change batteries when you
change your clocks.
- Encourage children to help
test the smoke detectors.
- Familiarize them with the
sounds of the alarm(s).
Flammables
Electrical
Safety and Heat Sources
Escaping
a Fire
- Keep bedroom doors shut
while sleeping. If you think there is a fire, feel the door and knob
for heat before opening.
- Have an escape route for
each area of the home and a designated meeting place outside.
- Draw a map-one that's
easy for all members of the family and visitors to understand.
- When planning for a family
with young children, be sure to teach them not to hide from fire or
smoke and to go to firefighters who are there to help them.
- All children should be
familiar with the ideas of "crawling underneath the smoke"
to escape a fire.
- "Stop, drop and roll"
is another safety principle that must be ingrained into children's
minds.
- Multi-storied buildings
are of special concern. Ensure that everyone is familiar with how
to use an escape ladder if necessary.
- Make sure every sleeping
room has two means of escape in the event of a fire.
- Windows provide a secondary
means of escape. Ensure they are in proper working order, are not
painted shut, and guards are able to be disengaged in case of fire
and escape is necessary through that window.
- Everyone must understand
that once you escape, you must never reenter a burning building-no
matter what you might have left behind.
- Call emergency responders
(911) from a neighbor's house.
- Make sure to practice
your escape plan periodically. It will be easier to remember in case
of an emergency.
- Young children should
know their street address and last name (and, of course, how to dial
911).
- After you've planned for
the family, don't forget the pets. Alert firefighters about your pets.
Don't rely on window or door decals to alert firefighters-such decals
are often found to be outdated.
- In the event your pet
suffers from smoke inhalation, rush the animal to the vet.
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