Terranoman
31-03-2011, 00:30
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=79F6vVEd8ko
Fire safety campaigns
Don't drown in toxic smoke
Just two to three breaths of toxic smoke and you're unconscious
Toxic smoke will affect your ability to breathe, a sensation similar to drowning
Drowning in the smoke of a house fire is the risk you take if you do not have a working smoke alarm
Testing your smoke alarm every week could make the difference in protecting your home and loved ones.
People vastly underestimate the impact of toxic smoke
How long do you think you could survive in a smoke filled room?
In a Fire Kills survey (2009) almost half (43 percent) believed they could survive for more than two minutes in a smoke filled room.
However, toxic smoke can kill a child in under a minute.
Do you believe that if you had a fire you would be alerted by the smell of smoke?
Nearly half of those surveyed (48 percent) thought they would be, when in actual fact the gases and smoke from a fire can numb the senses and put you into a deeper sleep.
Working smoke alarm
The only way to buy vital time to escape from a house fire is by having a working smoke alarm.
Although 90 percent of those surveyed owned smoke alarms, 70 percent admitted to not testing them every week.
This is despite the fact that you are more than twice as likely to die in an accidental house fire if you do not have a working smoke alarm.
Ask the experts. Your Fire and Rescue Service offer free home fire safety checks give them a call. This includes identifying potential fire risks, giving advice on what to do to reduce or prevent them, and will fit free smoke alarms if they are needed.
Please watch the Fire Kills campaign advert on the Communities and Local Government YouTube channel to find out more about the effects of toxic smoke
Fire Kills campaign advert on YouTube
If a fire does break out in the home, then GET OUT, STAY OUT and CALL 999
Fire safety campaigns
Don't drown in toxic smoke
Just two to three breaths of toxic smoke and you're unconscious
Toxic smoke will affect your ability to breathe, a sensation similar to drowning
Drowning in the smoke of a house fire is the risk you take if you do not have a working smoke alarm
Testing your smoke alarm every week could make the difference in protecting your home and loved ones.
People vastly underestimate the impact of toxic smoke
How long do you think you could survive in a smoke filled room?
In a Fire Kills survey (2009) almost half (43 percent) believed they could survive for more than two minutes in a smoke filled room.
However, toxic smoke can kill a child in under a minute.
Do you believe that if you had a fire you would be alerted by the smell of smoke?
Nearly half of those surveyed (48 percent) thought they would be, when in actual fact the gases and smoke from a fire can numb the senses and put you into a deeper sleep.
Working smoke alarm
The only way to buy vital time to escape from a house fire is by having a working smoke alarm.
Although 90 percent of those surveyed owned smoke alarms, 70 percent admitted to not testing them every week.
This is despite the fact that you are more than twice as likely to die in an accidental house fire if you do not have a working smoke alarm.
Ask the experts. Your Fire and Rescue Service offer free home fire safety checks give them a call. This includes identifying potential fire risks, giving advice on what to do to reduce or prevent them, and will fit free smoke alarms if they are needed.
Please watch the Fire Kills campaign advert on the Communities and Local Government YouTube channel to find out more about the effects of toxic smoke
Fire Kills campaign advert on YouTube
If a fire does break out in the home, then GET OUT, STAY OUT and CALL 999