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Article
#1:
(As
published in the NFPA Journal and on the NFPA web site at www.nfpa.org)
New
Information about Smoke Detectors!
Smoke detectors
aren't new. The technology has been around since the 1960s. The
single-station, battery-powered smoke detector, similar to the one
we know today, became available to consumers in the 1970s. NFPA
estimates that 93% of U.S. homes have at least one smoke detector.
They save so many lives that most states have laws requiring them
in residential dwellings. So, why is all the attention being paid
to smoke detectors this Fire Prevention Week?
Still
a Major Problem
Although 13
of every 14 homes have at least one smoke detector, almost half
of home fires and three-fifths of fire deaths occur in the share
of homes with no detectors. Thousands of people still die each year
in home fires where smoke detectors aren't present.
In addition,
there are now more homes with smoke detectors that don't work than
homes without detectors at all. These poorly maintained units create
a false sense of security among occupants. Approximately one-third
of homes with smoke detectors that experience fires have smoke detectors
that aren't working, and hundreds of people die each year in these
fires.
Tragically,
the grave importance of installing and maintaining smoke detectors
has not yet been fully realized. Most people who die in home fires
are not in the room where the fire starts; working smoke detectors
alert people to fire and give them time to escape in a situation
where minutes can mean the difference between life and death.
Working
Smoke Detectors Save Lives
Having a smoke
detector cuts your chance of dying nearly in half if you have a
home fire. By properly placing, regularly testing and maintaining
your detectors, you can ensure that they are in fact working and
will alert you if a fire breaks out. Make sure you buy only those
detectors that bear the mark of an independent testing laboratory.
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