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Carbon
Monoxide
Carbon Monoxide Picture


Key Points

The Invisible Killer

Carbon monoxide (CO) is a colorless, odorless, poisonous gas. You can’t taste, see or smell CO, but it can kill in just minutes. Appliances fueled with natural gas, liquefied petroleum (LP gas), oil, kerosene, coal, or wood may produce CO. Burning charcoal also produces CO.

Never Use a Generator or Burn Charcoal inside the Home

For 2002-2004, an average of 166 people in the United States died from unintentional, non-fire CO poisoning. Some died from CO produced by fuel-burning appliances (furnaces, ranges, water heaters, room heaters). Others died from CO produced while burning charcoal or running a gas powered generator inside the home or garage. Several thousand people went to hospital emergency rooms for treatment for CO poisoning.

All Homes Should have CO Alarms

Every home should have a CO alarm in the hallway near the bedroom(s) in each separate sleeping area. CO alarms should be installed according to the manufacturer's instructions. Make sure you install battery operated or plug-in CO alarms that have battery back-up.


Resources


bulletThe Invisible Killer (pdf)
Reviews sources of carbon monoxide (CO) and clues to a possible carbon monoxide problem in the home.
bulletPortable Generator Danger
Links to posters, safety cards, door hangers, safety alerts and public service announcements all aimed at promoting safety with generators and reducing CO deaths.
bulletWhat to Know: Generators and CO
Safety tips to use when using portable generators.
bulletCarbon Monoxide Poisoning from Camping Equipment
A safety alert discussing carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning from camping equipment such as portable camping heaters, lanterns, stoves, campers and vehicles. Also, provides prevention advice and information on how to recognize the symptoms of CO poisoning.
bulletResponding to Residential Carbon Monoxide Incidents (pdf)
A guide to first responders on dealing with incidents of carbon monoxide exposure.