Fire Escape Planning and Practice
Home Escape Planning
If a fire broke out in the
middle of the night, would you and your family be able to escape safely?
Although most Americans believe they could get out alive, according to the
NFPA (Nation Fire Protection Association), only a small number (16%) have
actually developed and practiced a home fire escape plan to ensure they
could escape quickly and safely.
Some 4,000 fire deaths occur in U.S. homes
every year, and too often it's because people did not, or could not, get
out of a burning home in time. Developing and practicing a home fire
escape plan is the key to survival.
The elements of an effective home fire
escape plan include the following:
- Working smoke
alarms on every level of the home and outside all sleeping areas
- Two ways out of
each room
- Unobstructed and
easy-to-use exits
- A meeting place
outside
- A posted
emergency phone number for the fire department
- Practicing the
plan at least twice a year with every member of the household
Everyone, including preschoolers, can be taught the
basics of fire escape. If there are infants or family members with
mobility limitations, someone in the household should plan to assist them.
Also make sure that doors needed for escape can be opened easily, and that
windows are not nailed or painted shut. The most important thing to
remember is to react to the sound of a smoke alarm immediately and make
getting out your top priority.
This year, in conjunction with fire departments
throughout the U.S. and Canada, NFPA is seeking to increase the number of
families that are prepared to escape a home fire by encouraging them to
practice their home fire drills during "The Great Escape" North American
unified fire drill on Wednesday, October 11 at 7 p.m. NFPA, the official
sponsor of Fire Prevention Week for more than 75 years, launched "The
Great Escape" in 1998 as a three-year public awareness initiative that
encourages people across North America to develop and physically practice
a home fire escape plan. We already know it's working -- 56 lives saved as
a direct result have already been documented.
Office Fire Safety
Would you know what to do if there was a
fire in your office building?
Plan Ahead
All employees should:
- Know the location of
the nearest fire alarm, know how to use it, and be familiar with the
sound it makes.
- Learn the location of
two exits from all work areas.
- Always participate in
workplace fire drills.
- Post the fire
department's emergency phone number on or near the telephone.
- Count the doors or
desks between your work area and the nearest exit. During a fire, it
may be necessary to escape in the dark.
- Be sure that someone
in authority knows if you have any temporary or permanent disability
that could delay your escape. Work with them and your local fire
department to develop appropriate procedures to protect you in a fire.
Employers should:
- Conduct regular
mandatory fire drills at least twice a year.
- Post building
evacuation programs and discuss them during new-employee orientations.
- Include employees with
special needs in the emergency planning process.
If fire strikes...
-
Sound the alarm and call
the fire department, even if the fire appears small.
-
Leave quickly, closing
doors as you go to contain fire and smoke.
-
If you encounter smoke or
flame during your escape, use another exit. Since heat and smoke rise,
cleaner and cooler air will be near the floor. If you must exit
through smoke, crawl on your hands and knees toward your exit, keeping
your head in the "safety zone" one to two feet (30 – 60 centimeters)
above the floor.
-
Test doors before you open
them. Kneel at the door; reach up as high as you can and touch the
door, the knob, the space between the door and its frame with the back
of your hand. If the door is warm, use another escape route. If the
door is cool, open it slowly and be prepared to slam it shut if smoke
or heat rushes in.
-
Follow the directions of
fire and security personnel. Once outside, move away from the
building, out of the way of firefighters, and stay out until the fire
department says you may go back in.
If you stay…
If you cannot escape
safely or if you're instructed to stay where you are, be calm and
protect yourself.
-
If possible, go to a
room with an outside window and a telephone, closing all doors
between you and the fire.
-
Use duct tape or stuff
the crack around the door with towels, rags, or bedding and cover
vents to keep the smoke out of the room.
-
If there's a telephone
in the room where you're trapped, call the fire department emergency
number and tell them exactly where you are. Do this even if you can
see fire trucks from your window.
-
Wait at a window and
signal for help with a flashlight beam, if you have one, or by
waving a sheet or other light-colored cloth.
-
If possible, open the
window at the top and bottom to allow fresh air in, but close it
quickly if smoke from outside comes in. Do not break the window.
-
Be patient. Rescuing all
occupants may take several hours.
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