Americans
Underestimate their Risk of Fire, Fire Prevention Week Survey Finds
3,925
Died in Fires in 2003 – Many More Than in all Natural Disasters
Combined
NATIONAL FIRE PROTECTION ASSOCIATION
Official Press Release
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Complete
Fire Prevention Week Info from NFPA
Americans underestimate their risk of fire, a
new survey from the
National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) has found. Choosing
from a list of disasters, 31 percent of those surveyed said they
felt most at risk for tornado, while only 27 percent named fire as
the highest risk, followed by hurricane (14 percent), earthquake (9
percent), flood (9 percent) and terrorist attack (5 percent).
But among all those disasters, fires are
actually more common -- and many times more deadly. Fire departments
responded to 1.6 million fires in the United States in 2003. While
tornadoes average 70 deaths a year, fires killed 3,925 people in
2003, most of them in the home.
Fires also cause significant property damage,
especially when compared with other disasters. In recent years,
property damage from tornadoes averaged just over $1 billion and
from hurricanes just under $3 billion. But the cost of fire damage?
More than $12 billion in 2003, up 19 percent from the previous year,
due primarily to the $2 billion in losses in the southern California
wildfires.
NFPA commissioned the survey on fire
preparedness on the eve of its annual Fire Prevention Week (FPW),
which starts Oct. 3. This year's theme is "It's Fire Prevention
Week: Test Your Smoke Alarms." FPW emphasizes testing smoke alarms
because most people do not test as often as they should and as a
result one out of five home smoke alarms is not working. To conduct
the survey, Harris Interactive questioned a representative sampling
of 1,014 adults by telephone from Sept. 9 to 12.
Asked which kind of disaster they feel most
prepared for, the highest percentage of respondents (31 percent)
said they felt most prepared for fire. Their answers to other survey
questions suggest they are prepared -- but not prepared enough.
Ninety-six percent have smoke alarms, a new high for the nation. But
only one-fourth have developed and rehearsed a plan for escaping
their home in a fire, a goal of public education efforts such as FPW.
The survey also points to other challenges.
Small communities, poorer households and less educated households
had lower rates of smoke alarm ownership. Only 8 percent of people
whose smoke alarms went off responded as recommended -- assuming
there was a fire and leaving the house immediately. If most people
have not practiced escape and do not react to fire by immediately
starting to escape, then many will not escape in time.
"Fire remains a major cause of death, injury
and property damage in this country," said NFPA President James M.
Shannon. "We can prevent many of these losses. It's not enough to
have a smoke alarm. You should make sure it's working and you should
be prepared to get outside fast if it sounds."
According to NFPA's recent report,
Fire Loss in the United States During 2003, fire occurs in a
structure an average of once every 61 seconds. A civilian is injured
in a fire every 29 minutes, and dies in one every 134 minutes. And
four out of five fatal fires occur in the place where people feel
most safe: the home.
Deaths from fire overall have been declining
steadily over the past two decades. In 2002, fire deaths dropped
sharply. In 2003, the death rate returned to previous levels,
jumping 16 percent overall and 18 percent for deaths from fires in
the home, according to the report.
In its 82nd year, FPW is formally proclaimed
by the President of the United States each year and is officially
sponsored by NFPA.
NFPA has been a worldwide leader in providing
fire, electrical, building, and life safety to the public since
1896. The mission of the international nonprofit organization is to
reduce the worldwide burden of fire and other hazards on the quality
of life by providing and advocating scientifically-based consensus
codes and standards, research, training and education. |