
Fire & smoke can race through your home in seconds! Each year more than 4,000 Americans die and more than 25,000 are injured
in fires that could have been prevented. To keep that from
happening and know what to do if it does, spend a few moments on
these web pages. It's time well spent that may save your life
or your family's.
It's not a question
of luck, it's a matter of planning ahead.
Fire in the United States
Where fires occur
Causes of fire & fire related fatalities
Who's most at risk
What saves lives
Fire Facts
Fire in the United States
- The U.S. has one of the highest fire related fatality rates in the industrialized
world. In 1997, the U.S. fire death rate was 15.2 deaths per million population.
- Between 1993 and 1997, an average of 4,500 Americans lost their lives and another
26,500 were injured each year as the result of fire.
- About 100 firefighters are killed each year in duty-related incidents.
- Each year, fires kill more Americans than all natural disasters combined.
- Fire is the third leading cause of accidental death in the home; at least 80 percent
of all fire deaths occur in residences.
- About 2 million fires are reported each year; many others go unreported, causing
untold additional injuries and property loss.
- Direct property loss due to fires is estimated at $8.5 billion annually.
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Where Fires Occur
There were 1,795,000 fires in the United States in 1997. Of these:
- 40% were Outside Fires
- 31% were Structure Fires
- 22% were Vehicle Fires
- 7% were fires of other types
Residential fires represent 23 percent of all fires and 74 percent of structure
fires. Fires in the home most often start in the:
- Kitchen 29%
- Bedroom 13%
- Living Room 7%
- Chimney 5%
- Laundry Area 4%
The South and Northeast share the highest rate of civilian fatalities per-capita,
with 17.5 deaths per million. 84 percent of all fatalities occur in the home...of
those, approximately 80 percent occur in single-family homes and duplexes.
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Causes of Fires and Fire Related Fatalities
- Cooking is the leading cause of home fires in the U.S. It is also the leading
cause of fire injuries. These 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 fatalities. Smoke alarms and smolder-resistant
bedding and upholstered furniture are significant fire deterrents.
- Heating is the second leading cause of residential fires and ties with arson as
the second leading cause of fire deaths. Heating fires, however, 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.
- Arson is the third leading cause of residential fires and the second leading cause
of residential fire deaths. In commercial properties, arson is the major cause
of deaths, injuries, and dollar loss.
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Who is Most at Risk?
- Senior citizens and children under the age of five have the greatest risk of perishing
in a fire.
- The risk among seniors is more than double the average population.
- The risk for children under age five is nearly double the risk of the average population.
- Children under the age of ten accounted for an estimated 18 percent of all fire
deaths in 1995.
- Over 30 percent of the fires that kill young children are started by children playing
with fire.
- Men die or are injured in fires twice as often as women.
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What Saves Lives
- A working smoke alarm dramatically increases a person's chance of surviving a fire.
- Approximately 90 percent of U.S. homes have at least one smoke alarm. These alarms,
however, are not always properly maintained and as a result might not work in an
emergency. There has been a disturbing increase over the last ten years in the number
of fires that occur in homes with non-functioning alarms.
- It is estimated that over 40 percent of residential fires and three-fifths of residential
fatalities occur in homes with no working smoke alarms.
- Residential sprinklers have become more cost effective for homes. Currently, few
homes are protected by them.