NFPA wants to teach families and kids how to keep cooking
fires from starting in the first place. Here are some fast facts
and safety tips about cooking fires.
* Between 1999-2002, there were 114,000 reported home fires
associated with cooking equipment every year, resulting in an
annual 290 deaths and 4,380 injuries.
* Unattended cooking is the leading cause of home cooking
fires.
* Three in 10 reported home fires start in the kitchen --
more than any other place in the home.
* Two out of three reported home cooking fires start with the
range or stove.
* Electric ranges or stoves have a higher risk of fires,
injuries and property damage, compared to gas ranges or stoves,
but gas ranges or stoves have a higher risk of fire deaths.
But there's even more to learn!
Here is more information -- on U.S. fire deaths, heating
equipment, candles, smoke alarms, home fire sprinklers, as well
as a sleepover fire safety checklist -- to keep you informed
about making your home safer.
Fire deaths
* In 2004, there were 395,500 reported home fires in the
United States, resulting in 3,190 deaths, 13,700 injuries and
$5.8 billion in direct property damage.
* In the U.S., a home structure fire is reported every 79
seconds, and someone dies from a home fire every 135 minutes.
* In Canada during 2001, someone was fatally injured in a
residential fire roughly every 32 hours.
* Cooking fires are the #1 cause of home fires and home fire
injuries.
* Roughly half of all home fire deaths in the U.S. resulted
from fires that were reported between the hours of 11:00 p.m.
and 7:00 a.m. But only one-fifth (21%) of home fires occur
between those hours.
* Although children five and under make up about 7% of the
U.S. population, they accounted for 12% of the home fire deaths,
giving them a risk almost twice the national average.
* Older adults are also at greater risk of dying in a home
fire than the population at large. Adults 65 and older face a
risk twice the average, while people 85 and older have a risk
that is three-and-a-half times more than average.
* Twenty-nine percent of the home fire deaths in 1999-2002
resulted from fires started by smoking materials, 19% of the
deaths were caused by intentionally set fires.
* Heating equipment was involved in 11% of the home fire
deaths in 1999-2002. Fifty-seven percent of home heating fire
deaths resulted from fires in December, January or February.
Space heater Heating
* Heating equipment is the second most common cause of home
fires after cooking equipment. Between 1999 and 2002, heating
equipment caused an average of 59,000 home fires each year,
resulting in 360 deaths and 1,290 injuries annually.
* Fireplaces or chimneys rank first in the number of fires
among types of heating equipment. Most of these were caused by
creosote build-up.
* Portable and fixed space heaters, including wood stoves,
caused a disproportionate share of the home heating fire deaths.
Space heaters were involved in 25% of the home heating fires but
74% of the deaths.
Candles
* Candle fires account for an estimated 5% of all reported
home fires and home fire deaths.
* During 2002, an estimated 18,000 home fires started by
candles were reported to public fire departments. These fires
resulted in an estimated 130 civilian deaths, 1,350 civilian
injuries and an estimated direct property loss of $333 million.
* Forty percent of U.S. home candle fires begin in the
bedroom, causing 30% of the deaths resulting from these fires.
* Children between five and nine are twice as likely to die
in a home candle fire as the general population.
* December had almost twice the number of home candle fires
of an average month.
* Seven out of 10 households in the U.S. now use candles,
with younger adults more likely to use them than older adults.
* Falling asleep was a factor in 12% of home candle fires and
25% of the home candle fire deaths.
Smoke alarms
* A 2004 U.S. telephone survey found that 96% of the
households surveyed had at least one smoke alarm.
* Roughly half of home fire deaths result from fires in the
small percentage of homes with no smoke alarms.
* Roughly 70% of home fire deaths result from fires in homes
with no smoke alarms or no working smoke alarms.
* Homes with smoke alarms (whether or not they are
operational) typically have a death rate that is 40-50% less
than the rate for homes without alarms.
* In one-quarter of the reported fires in homes equipped with
smoke alarms, the devices did not work. Households with
non-working smoke alarms now outnumber those with no smoke
alarms.
* When smoke alarms fail, it is most often because of
missing, disconnected or dead batteries.
Home escape planning
* According to a 2004 NFPA survey (PDF, 759 KB), only one in
four Americans has devised and practiced a plan to escape from
the home during a fire.
* While 66% of Americans have an escape plan in case of a
fire. Only 34% of those with a plan have practiced it.
* Eighteen to 24-year-olds are the least likely to have even
developed an escape plan.
* Develop and practice a home fire escape plan using NFPA's
home escape plan grid (PDF, 73 KB).
Smoking materials
* Smoking materials (i.e., cigarettes, cigars, pipes, etc.)
are the leading cause of fire deaths and the third leading cause
of fire injuries in the U.S.
* Roughly one of every four U.S. structure fire deaths in
2002, was attributed to smoking materials.
* The most common material first ignited in home smoking
material-related fires was trash or waste, followed by
mattresses and bedding, and upholstered furniture.
Electrical
* Electrical distribution equipment (including wiring,
switches, outlets, cords and plugs, fuse and circuit breaker
boxes, lighting fixtures and lamps) was the fifth leading cause
of home fires and the sixth leading cause of fire deaths in the
United States between 1999 and 2002.
* The most common types of electrical distribution equipment
involved in home fires are 1) fixed wiring, 2) lamps or
lighting, and 3) cords or plugs.
Home fire sprinklers
* Properly installed and maintained, automatic fire sprinkler
systems help save lives.
* When sprinklers are present, the chances of dying in a fire
and the average property loss per fire are both cut by one-half
to two-thirds, compared to where sprinklers are not present.
* Automatic fire sprinklers and smoke alarms together cut
your risk of dying in a home fire by 82% when compared to having
neither.