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Teaching Children Fire Safety
Every day Americans experience the tragedy of fire. Each year more than
4,000 Americans die in fires and more than 25,000 are injured. Figures show
that each year about 300 people are killed and $280 million in property is
destroyed in fires attributed to children playing with fire. Below are
some facts about children and fire safety.
Curious Kids Set Fires
Children under five are curious about fire. Often what begins as a natural
exploration of the unknown can lead to tragedy.
- Children of all ages set over 100,000 fires annually. Approximately
20,000 of those fires are set in homes.
- Children make up 20% of all fire deaths.
- Over 30% of the fires that kill children are set by children playing
with fire.
- At home, children usually play with fire in bedrooms, in closets and
under beds. These are "secret" places where there are a lot of things that
catch fire easily.
- Too often, child firesetters are not given proper guidance and
supervision by parents and teachers. Consequently, they repeat their
firesetting behavior.
Practice Fire Safety in Your Home
- Supervise young children closely. Do not leave them alone even for short
periods of time.
- Keep matches and lighters in a secured drawer or cabinet.
- Have your children tell you when they find matches and lighters.
- Check under beds and in closets for burned matches, evidence your child
may be playing with fire.
- Develop a home fire escape plan, practice it with your children and
designate a meeting place outside.
- Take the mystery out of fire play by teaching children that fire is a
tool, not a toy.
- Teach children the nature of fire. It is FAST, HOT, DARK and DEADLY!
- Teach children not to hide from firefighters, but to get out quickly and
call for help from another location.
- Show children how to crawl low on the floor, below the smoke, to get out
of the house and stay out in the case of fire.
- Demonstrate how to stop, drop to the ground and roll if their clothes
catch fire.
- Install smoke alarms on every level in your home.
- Familiarize children with the sound of your smoke alarm.
- Test the smoke alarm each month and replace the battery at least once a
year.
- Replace the smoke alarm every ten years, or as recommended by the
manufacturer.
Finally, having a working smoke alarm dramatically increases your chances
of surviving a fire. And remember to practice a home escape plan frequently
with your family.
Source: FEMA: US Fire Administration
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