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E.D.I.T.H.
Exit
Drills In The Home
In 1995, 3640 Americans died in home fires. That's roughly 10 people
a day. Tens of thousands more were injured. People can survive even
major fires in their homes if they are alerted to the fire and get out
quickly and stay out.
How to Survive
*Install
smoke detectors and keep them in working order.
*Make
an escape plan and practice it.
*Consider
installing an automatic fire sprinkler system.
Plan Your Escape
Once a fire has started, there is no time to plan how to get out. Sit
down with your family today, and make a step-by-step plan for escaping
a fire.
Draw a floor
plan of your home, marking two ways out of every room - especially
sleeping areas. Discuss the escape routes with every member of your
household.
Agree on a meeting
place where every member of the household will gather outside your
home after escaping a fire to wait for the fire department. This allows
you to count heads and inform the fire department if anyone is missing
or trapped inside the burning building.
Practice your
escape plan at least twice a year. Have a fire drill in your home.
Appoint someone to be monitor, and have everyone participate. A fire
drill is not a race. Get out quickly but carefully.
Make Your Exit Drill Realistic
Pretend that some exits are blocked by fire, and practice alternative
escape routes. Pretend that the lights are out and that some escape
routes are filling with smoke.

Be Prepared
Make sure everyone in the household can unlock all doors and windows
quickly, even in the dark. Windows or doors with security bars need
to be equipped with quick-release devices, and everyone in the household
should know how to use them.
If you live
in an apartment building, use stairways to escape. Never use an
elevator during a fire. It may stop between floors or take you to a
floor where the fire is burning. Some high-rise buildings may have evacuation
plans that require you to stay where you are and wait for the fire department.
If you live
in a multi-story house, and you must escape from an upper story
window, be sure there is a safe way to reach the ground, such as a fire-resistant
fire escape ladder. Make special arrangements for children, older adults,
and people with disabilities. People who have difficulty moving should
have a phone in their sleeping area and, if possible, should sleep on
the ground floor.
Test doors before opening
them. While
kneeling or crouching at the door, reach up as
high as you can and with the back of your hand touch the door, the knob,
and the crack between the door and its frame. If you feel any warmth
at all, use another escape route. If the door feels cool, open it with
caution. Put your shoulder against the door and open it slowly. Be prepared
to slam it shut if there is smoke or flames on the other side.

If you are trapped,
close all doors between you and the fire. Stuff the cracks around the
doors to keep out smoke. Wait at a window and signal for help with a
flashlight or by waving a light-colored cloth. If there's a phone in
the room, call the fire department and report exactly where you are.
Get Out Fast...
In case of a fire, don't stop for anything.
Do not try to rescue possessions or pets. Go directly to your meeting
place, and then call the fire department from a neighbor's phone, a
portable phone, or an alarm box. Every member of your household should
know how to call the fire department.
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Crawl low
under smoke.
Smoke contains deadly gases, and heat rises. During a fire, cleaner
air with be near the floor. If you encounter smoke when using your
primary exit, use an alternative escape route. If you must exit through
smoke, crawl on your hands and knees, keeping your head 12 to 24 inches
(30 to 60 centimeters) above the floor.

... and Stay Out
Once you are out of your home, don't go back for any reason. If
people are trapped, the 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.

Play It Safe
Smoke detectors. More than half of all fatal home fires happen
at night while people are asleep. Smoke detectors sound an alarm when
a fire starts, waking people before they are trapped or overcome by
smoke. With smoke detectors, your risk of dying in a home fire is
cut nearly in half.
Install smoke
detectors outside every sleeping area and on every level of your home,
including the basement. Follow installation instructions carefully,
and test smoke detectors monthly. Change all smoke detector batteries
at least once a year. If your detector is more than 10 years old,
replace it with a new one.
Automatic
fire-sprinkler systems.
These systems attack a fire in its early stages by spraying water
only on the area where the fire has begun. Consider including sprinkler
systems in plans for new construction and installing them in existing
homes.
People Protecting
People 1896
© National Fire Protection Association
Batterymarch Park, Quincy, MA 02269-9101
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