Fire prevention technology today is more advanced than ever, but the ultimate responsibility for fire safety in your home falls on you and your household. The smallest source of flame can create a fire that spreads through a home in minutes, and if caught unprepared, children and adults alike may not know how to respond. Thankfully, if you follow the five steps below, you can prepare your household for how to react should a fire ever occur in your home.

  1. Prevent

As with all dangers, prevention is the most important step. Be sure every member of your household has an age-appropriate understanding of how to safely handle – or not handle – all potential sources of fire. Possible ignition sources range from electronics and power plugs to appliances (especially ovens and cooktops) to matches and lighters. Keep dangerous materials locked away from young children and avoid demonstrating their use (such as lighting matches) in their presence so they don’t learn to imitate. Make sure your home has sufficient smoke alarms and fire extinguishers and that age-appropriate family members know how to maintain and operate them.

  1. Recognize and React

Educate everyone in your home on how to identify and respond to a fire. They should be familiarized with the sound of the home’s smoke alarms as well as the implications of smelling smoke or seeing flames. Young children who need help escaping a fire should be taught to call for help and not to hide, so they are easy to locate and rescue.

  1. Escape

Getting away from a fire isn’t always simple with the possibility of heavy smoke and blocked exits. Everyone should know two escape routes from every room and how to use them, including windows if necessary. Have a plan on how to ensure any children, pets, elderly and those with special needs can be escorted from the home in an emergency. Staying low to the floor to avoid smoke and testing doorknobs for heat to detect a fire on the other side are also important skills for escape. Additional plans may be needed for those in wildfire risk areas and multi-level or multi-unit buildings.

  1. Regroup

Have a prearranged meeting place for all members of your household to meet after escaping. This makes it clear as soon as possible as to who is safe and who may still need to be rescued. A safe, familiar location away from the home is ideal. In regions with cold winters or harsh weather, a neighbor’s home may be best.

  1. Practice

Practice your plan as a household and be sure to update it as necessary. You may need to refresh your plan after switching occupants to new bedrooms, making modifications to the home (such as different windows or a new addition) or moving to a new home entirely.

Conclusion

With these fire safety steps mastered, you’ll have the peace of mind of knowing your household is safer from the dangers of fires. For more home fire safety resources, visit the National Fire Protection Association’s website.

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