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Fire Facts
Public
Safety Building
312 East Fifth Street, Suite 2
Muscatine, Iowa 52761
Phone: (563) 263-9233
Fax: (563) 263-5534
Email:jewers@ci.muscatine.ia.us
Everyday Americans
experience the horror of fire. But most people don’t understand
fire. Only when we know the true nature of fire can we prepare our
families and ourselves. Each year more than 4,000 American’s
die and approximately 25,000 are injured in fires many of which
could have been prevented. Nearly 1,000 lives are lost to fires
that originated in the bedroom and about 100 firefighters are killed
in the line of duty each year. Each year in the United States fires
kill more American’s than all natural disasters combined.
About 80% of these deaths occur in residences and it is estimated
that over 39% of residential fires and 52% of residential fatalities
occur in homes with no smoke alarms. A working smoke alarm dramatically
increases a person’s chance of survival. Residential sprinklers
have also become more cost effective to install in homes although
few homes still have them. During the winter months, the potential
for fires increase because of the use of Christmas trees, heating
appliances such as the furnace, space heaters, and fireplaces as
well as the increased use of lighting. House fires in the U.S. that
are started by candles are at a 20-year high. Children playing with
fire set over 100,000 fires annually and over 30% of those fires
kill the children who started them. This is over 800 children killed
each year by the fires they set playing. Studies of electrical fires
in homes show that many problems are associated with improper installation
of electrical devices by do-it-yourselfers. Common errors that can
lead to fires include the use of improperly rated devices such as
switches or receptacles and loose connections at these devices.
A house fire is reported in the United States every 90 seconds this
is an average of 1.9 million fires reported each year and someone
dies in a house fire every two and one-half hours.
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FIRE
IS FAST |
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There
is little time! |
In
less than 30 seconds a small flame can get completely out of control
and turn into a major fire. It only takes minutes for thick black
smoke to fill a house. In minutes, a house can be engulfed in flames.
Most fires occur in the home when people are asleep. If you wake
up to a fire, you won’t have time to grab valuables because
fire spreads to quickly and the smoke is too thick. There is only
time to escape.
Heat
is more threatening than flames!
A fire’s
heat alone can kill. Room temperatures in a fire can be 100 degrees
at floor level and rise to 600 degrees at eye level. Inhaling this
supper hot air will scorch your lungs. This heat can melt clothes
to your skin. In five minutes a room can get so hot that everything
in it ignites at once: this is called flashover.
Fire
isn’t bright it’s pitch black. Fire starts bright, but
quickly produces black smoke and complete darkness. If you wake
up to a fire you may be blinded, disoriented and unable to find
you way around the home you have lived in for years.
Smoke
and toxic gases kill more people than flames do!
Fire uses up
the oxygen you need and produces smoke and poisonous gases that
kill. Breathing even small amounts of smoke and toxic gases can
make you drowsy, disoriented and short of breath. The odorless,
colorless fumes can lull you into a deep sleep before the flames
reach your door. You may not wake up in time to escape.
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CAUSES
OF FIRES AND FIRE DEATHS
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Cooking
is the leading cause of home fires in the U.S. It is also the leading
cause of home fire injuries. Cooking fires often result from unattended
cooking and human error, rather than mechanical failure of stoves
or ovens. Careless smoking is the leading cause of fire deaths.
Smoke alarms and smolder-resistant bedding and upholstered furniture
are significant fire deterrents. Arson is both the second leading
cause of residential fires and residential fire deaths. In commercial
properties, arson is the major cause of death, injuries and dollar
loss. Heating is the third leading cause of residential fires. Heating
fires are a larger problem in single-family homes than in apartments.
Unlike apartments, the heating systems in single-family homes are
often not professionally maintained.
Fires
in single family dwellings most often occur in the:
1. Kitchen (25.5%)
2. Bedroom (13.7%)
3. Living Room (8.6%)
4. Chimney (8.2%)
5. Laundry area (5%)
Apartment fires
most often occur in the:
1. Kitchen (48.5%)
2. Bedroom (13.4%)
3. Living Room (6.4%)
4. Laundry area (3.5%)
5. Bathroom (2.4%)
Senior
citizens age 65 and older and children under the age of 5 have the
greatest risk of fire death. The fire death risk among seniors over
65 is more than double; over the age 75 triple; over the age 85,
3 and on half times the average population. Children under the age
of 10 accounted for an estimated 22.2 % of all fire deaths. Men
die or are injured in fires almost twice as often as women. African
Americans and American Indians have significantly higher death rates
per capita than the national average. Although African Americans
comprise an estimated 13% of the population, they account for 26
% of the fire deaths.
NOTE:
IN THE ESTIMATED TIME IT TOOK YOU TO READ THIS PAGE THERE HAS BEEN
AN ESTIMATED 3 TO 4 STRUCTURE FIRES REPORTED SOMEWHERE IN THE UNITED
STATES.
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