Fire safety
If a fire starts while you’re asleep – and you don’t have a working smoke alarm – there’s a strong chance you’ll never get out. You will just drift deeper and deeper into a fume-filled sleep. Children are particularly vulnerable in a fire. If they are scared, they may hide rather than try to escape. Find out how to keep your family safe from fire.
Did you know?
- You and your children are twice as likely to die in a house fire if you don’t have a working smoke alarm.
- When firefighters put out house fires, they find that many families’ smoke alarms aren’t actually working. For example, the batteries are dead or have been removed.
- Families where someone smokes are at greatest risk. Cigarettes, matches and lighters are the biggest single cause of fatal house fires. But – worryingly – smokers are less likely to own a smoke alarm than non-smokers.
- Cooking starts almost half of all house fires, with chip pans and greasy grill pans common culprits.
- Faulty electrics start up to one in six house fires. Causes include overloaded sockets, loose wiring, damaged cables and leads, and faulty or misused electrical appliances.
- Tea lights get hot enough to melt plastic.
- 6,000 fires a year are caused by children under the age of 10. Children can be fascinated by fire but don’t understand its dangers.
- Your family is almost three times more likely to be killed in a fire that starts during the night.
- The smoke released in a house fire contains poisonous gases – including carbon monoxide. Most people caught in a fire die from breathing in poisonous smoke.
- It can take just a few minutes from a fire starting to your home being full of smoke. The smoke is thick and dark, so it can be hard to see where you’re going.
- All UK fire brigades provide free home fire safety checks.
Safety tips
- You need a working smoke alarm on every floor of your home – upstairs as well as downstairs – to warn you quickly if a fire starts.
- Test your smoke alarms every week to check that they’re working.
- If the smoke alarm by your kitchen keeps going off when you’re cooking – don’t remove the batteries! Move the alarm further away from the kitchen door. Or change it for one with a silencer button or one that’s ‘toast-proof’.
- Change your old lighter for one that is child-resistant. And move matches and lighters where children can’t see them or reach them.
- Stub cigarettes right out in an ashtray. And – if you’re feeling sleepy – never be tempted to light up.
- Replace your chip pan with a thermostatically controlled deep-fat fryer or use oven chips. If you can’t give up your chip pan, never fill it more than one third full of oil.
- One plug per socket is safest if you want to avoid an electrical fire.
- Don’t put night lights or tea lights on a plastic bath or on top of a TV set – they can melt the plastic and start a fire.
- Plan how your family will escape if a fire breaks out. Then practise the plan together.
- Tidy up your hallway. Move bags, shoes and toys, so there’s no chance of tripping over them if you need to get out in a hurry.
- Keep keys to doors and windows where family members can find them quickly and easily in an emergency.
- In the event of a fire, get out, stay out and call 999.
Useful links
For more fire safety advice, visit www.direct.gov.uk/firekills or www.dontgivefireahome.com
For information on free home fire safety visits and free smoke alarms, contact your local fire and rescue service:
England visit www.fire.gov.uk/Find+my+region.htm
Wales visit www.southwales-fire.gov.uk,
or www.nwales-fireservice.org.uk or www.mawwfire.gov.uk
Scotland visit www.dontgivefireahome.com/fire_safety/1347.html
Northern Ireland visit www.nifrs.org/locations.php
Find and fix home fire hazards with an interactive room-by-room guide at
Practise escaping safely from a burning home at www.staywise.co.uk/activities
More information on electrical safety and house fires
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