SAFETY INFORMATION
Baby Safety Month by Kansas Safe Kids
BBQ Cooking Safety
Bug Bites, Stings, etc.
Burn Bans
Burning Permits
Candle Burning
Bicycle Safety
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Childproofing Your Home
Consumer Product Safety Information
Cooking
Fire Prevention - Before, During and After a Fire
Fire Prevention Week
Fireworks
Flood Safety
Heat Exhaustion
Holiday/Seasonal Safety
Lightning Strikes
Playground Safety
Swimming Pools
Terrorism
Tornadoes

Fire Prevention - Before, During and After a Fire

Before a Fire
During a Fire
After a Fire

During a Fire

Knowing what to do before a fire occurs can save your life. Below are a few tips that will help you escape if you are in a building during a fire:

If a fire occurs and the room door is CLOSED:

  1. Get out of bed to the floor. Keep low.
  2. Crawl to the door.
  3. Feel the door. Use the palm of your hand to feel the lower, middle and upper parts of the door to be sure it is not hot.
  4. Brace yourself against the door and open it very slowly. Toxic gases or fire may be on the other side. Caution: Some doors may not get hot or may feel only warm due to their construction, so be very careful when opening any door when there is a fire. If smoke or hot gases rush into the room when you open the door, quickly close it and seek another method of escape.
  5. If it is safe to leave the room, get below the smoke and get out by the quickest and safest route.
  6. Once you are out of the burning building, stay out! Do not go back into the building.

If a fire occurs and the room door is OPEN:
  1. Get out of bed to the floor. Keep low.
  2. Check for smoke and fire.
  3. If it is safe to leave, cover your nose and mouth with a cloth (moist if possible). Get low and get out quickly.
  4. If there is smoke or fire, immediately close the door and use an alternate escape route.
STOP, DROP and ROLL:
All too often, people are badly burned when their clothes catch fire. Sometimes the burns are made worse when people run to get water or someone to help. Fires need air (oxygen) to burn. If your clothes catch fire and you run, you are feeding the fire and it will burn hotter and faster.

Teach your children and every member of your family the “Stop, Drop and Roll” safety lesson. Here are the basic steps:

STOP...
where you are. Running will only make the fire worse since fire feeds on oxygen

DROP...
to your knees and then to the ground.

ROLL...
over and over or from side to side, covering your eyes, nose, and mouth with your hands, if possible, rolling until you’re sure the fire is out. This will help smother the flames.

Remember that practice make perfect. Practicing make the actual response more of an immediate reaction that requires less thinking time during an actual emergency situation. Once the flames are out, cool the burned skin with water for 10 to 15 minutes and get medical attention. For more information visit the National Fire Protection Association.

 

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Now learn what to do after a fire

 

 

 

 

 

 


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