From our partners in safety at the NFPA is a video for kids that relates to our Summer of Safety theme this week - Home Escape Planning.
Please take a moment to have your child watch the short video below. Remember it is important that you include your kids in developing a home escape plan. As well, it is important you practice the plan by having a fire drill at home! Practice makes perfect!
Showing posts with label exit drills in the home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exit drills in the home. Show all posts
Thursday, July 17, 2014
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Make Sure Your Child Is Prepared For A Fire
Every home should have working smoke alarms and an escape plan in case of a fire. Include all family members in the planning process and make a plan for anyone with special needs or limitations such as a baby or toddler, the elderly or the disabled.
Create a fire escape floor plan:
- Start by drawing a rectangle on a piece of paper. Draw one for reach room of your home. Then draw in all doors and windows. Your children can use crayons to draw in beds, tables, etc.
- In one color, draw a line that shows the fastest way out of each room. Then, in another color, draw another line that shows the second fastest way out.
Now that you have your fire escape plan, talk to your family about how they would escape from each room of your house or apartment if there was a fire. The Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Service recommends having home fire drills regularly so everyone knows what to do in an emergency.
Know what to do in case of a fire.
- Pick a meeting place outside of your home where everyone can gather after they have left the burning building.
- NEVER use an elevator to escape a fire.
- Conduct home fire drills and make them realistic by holding your drills in the evening since kids can get disoriented in the dark and fires often happen at night.
- In case of a fire, get out first then call the fire department with a portable, cell or neighbor's phone from a safe location.
- Make sure that everyone knows that once you're out, stay out! Never go back inside of a burning building.
Escape Tips:
- Close doors behind you as you escape to slow the spread of fire and smoke.
- If you have to escape through smoke, remember that smoke rises. Teach children to "get low and go" if there's smoke. The air will be cleanest and easier to breath near the floor.
- Test doorknobs and spaces around closed doors with the back of your hand. If the door is warm, try another escape route. If it is cool, open it slowly. Slam the door shut if smoke pours through.
Things to Think About:
- If you're having a baby-sitter or overnight guests, these people need to learn your household fire escape plan, too. They should be familiar with the sound of the smoke alarm, escape routes and your family's meeting place.
- Can everyone in your home - including children - unlock and open all doors and windows?
- You may want to consider supplying upper bedrooms with escape ladders. Show children where the ladders are kept, how to attach them to the window and how to use them. Demonstrate how to back out of the window and go down the ladder feet first. Montgomery County Fire and Rescue recommends practicing from a ground floor window where there is no risk of falling.
- If you need to descend a ladder to escape, be sure to lower children to the ground before you exit from the window. They may panic in an emergency situation and not follow you if you go first.
- If your windows have security bars, equip them with quick-release devices, and teach everyone in your household how to use them.
- Test your smoke alarms once a month.
- Replace alarm batteries once a year.
- Smoke alarms don't last forever. Replace alarms that are more than 10 years old, following manufacturer instructions.
Monday, July 14, 2014
It's Home Escape Planning Week! Learn How to Plan Exit Drills in the Home (E.D.I.T.H.)
As part of our Summer of Safety program, this week is Home Escape Planning week. Please take a moment to review below and learn how to develop, and practice, a Home Escape Plan!
Being ready is the key to surviving a home fire.
There are three things YOU can do to protect your family. They are simple, but they are very important. Do them now, before fire strikes.
- Install smoke alarms on every level of your home.
- Test smoke alarms monthly to be sure they are working and replace batteries at least once a year. If your smoke alarm makes a "chirping sound" - replace the battery immediately.
- Plan and practice home fire drills.
Make a Home Escape Plan!
Fire strikes quickly, often in the middle of the night while your family is asleep. Establish a plan now for evacuating each member of your family. Then, if fire does strike, everyone will know what to do and where to go.
One of the ways to keep your family safe is by practicing E.D.I.T.H. (Exit Drills In The Home). Many injuries are caused by people of all ages reacting improperly when there is a fire in their home. They may be affected by smoke, disoriented by being awakened abruptly and frightened.
It is critical that every household have a step-by-step plan for escaping a fire and practice it by having a "Home Fire Drill" at least twice a year.
Remember, your primary route should be the quickest, most direct way out. For example, through the front door to your meeting place or through a window to a roof or balcony where you can safely wait for help. The secondary route should be the next safest, most direct path out. For example, through the window of the room next door. Unless your children are infants, don't have them wait for your help. In a fire, parents may be blocked from their children's bedrooms by smoke or flames. As soon as they are able, each child should know how to escape a fire and be taught to do so as soon as he or she smells smoke or hears the sound of the smoke alarm.
- Practice your plan with a HOME FIRE DRILL.
- Make sure everyone understands what to do and assess each escape route realistically to be sure it can be used in an emergency. Walk through the primary and alternative escape routes, ensuring that all exits are accessible to all members of your household. For example, will windows open easily? Are ropes and ladders required to escape from second-story windows? (If you choose to have escape ladders, always practice using a ground floor window). Practice your plan at night because things look very different in the dark.
- If windows or doors in your home have security bars, make sure that the bars have quick-release mechanisms operational from the inside so that they can be opened immediately in an emergency. Quick-release mechanisms won't compromise your security, but they will increase your chances of safely escaping a home fire.
- Go outside to see if your house number is clearly visible from the street.
- Numbers must be visible to ensure that responding emergency personnel can find your home. In Montgomery County, Maryland existing residential home numbering can be 3 1/2 inches high, however new residential homes must be at least 5 inches high and if you replace existing numbers they must be at least 5 inches high. Numbers should be placed on a contrasting background, with a reflective coating on the numbers for easy visibility at night.
- Escape first and then call 9-1-1 from a neighbor's house.
- In the event of a fire, do not stop for anything. Do not try to rescue possessions or pets. Closing doors on your way out slows the spread of fire, giving you more time to safely escape. Go directly to your meeting place and then call the fire department from a neighbor's phone. Every member of your household should know how to call the fire department.
- Get out and stay out.
- Once you are out of your home, do not go back for any reason. If people are trapped, firefighters have the best chance of rescuing them. The heat and smoke of a fire are overpowering. Firefighters have the training, experience and protective equipment needed to enter burning buildings.
- Establish a meeting place outside your house and everyone should proceed to this location immediately to take attendance and make sure everyone has escaped.
- Crawl low under smoke.
- Smoke contains deadly gases and heat rises. During a fire, cleaner air will be near the floor. Teach your family that in a fire they must stay low to the floor to avoid smoke and intense heat. If you encounter smoke when using your primary exit, use your alternate escape plan. If you must exit through smoke, crawl on your hands and knees keeping your head 12 to 24 inches above the floor.
- Revise your escape plan as circumstances change in your household. Make sure everyone including young children, older adults and people with disabilities are included.
- Remember - children sleep very deeply.
- Adults need to make sure that children know the sound of the smoke alarm and what to do if they hear it. You can find out who can hear the smoke alarm if you have a fire drill when everyone else is sleeping. If anyone in your home does not wake to the smoke alarm or requires assistance getting out, plan to designate an adult to help them escape.
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