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Preventing Fire Deaths and Injuries: CDC Activities

Programs Underway

National effort to reduce residential fire deaths
As a member of the Public-Private Fire Safety Council, CDC works in partnership with the United States Fire Administration, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and several non-government organizations to coordinate a national effort to substantially reduce the number of residential fire deaths. In support of this effort, Congress appropriated $5 million in fiscal year 2002 to the three agencies for a new fire safety campaign targeting high-risk populations—older adults, children, and firefighters. The partners have initiated activities related to surveillance, research, community programs and marketing. Their joint activities include: research into the risk factors for residential fire-related injuries; data collection and analysis to track trends and progress; CDC’s community-based smoke alarm installation and fire safety education project; and a pilot project to examine a community-based Civilian Fire Safety Corps, whose primary purpose is to conduct fire safety education. Recently, CDC and USFA began working together to assess the effectiveness of fire safety programs and initiatives that their agencies have traditionally funded. In April 2006, the Public-Private Fire Safety Council prepared the first of a series of white papers that will outline major strategies for reducing the annual death toll from residential fires. A free copy of the paper can be found at this web page: www.firesafety.gov/downloads/pdf/white-paper-alarms.pdf.

Smoke alarm installation and fire-safety education
Since 1998, CDC has funded smoke alarm installation and fire safety education programs in high-risk communities—those with fire death rates higher than state and national averages and median household incomes below the poverty level. An informal sample of program homes found that 1,451 lives potentially have been saved thus far. Program staff have enrolled nearly 185,000 homes and installed more than 324,000 long-lasting smoke alarms in high-risk homes, targeting households with children ages five years and younger and adults ages 65 years and older. CDC funded 14 states from 1998 to 2000. Based on the success of these programs, CDC awarded five-year cooperative agreements to 13 states in 2001 to install long-lasting, lithium-powered smoke alarms and to provide fire-safety education in homes in high-risk communities. They include: Alabama, Alaska, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mississippi, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Virginia, and Washington. In 2002, 3 additional states (Arkansas, Massachusetts, and Montana) were awarded funding for these activities, bringing the total number of CDC-funded states to 16. In 2006, 17 5-year cooperative agreements were awarded to continue this program; award recipients are Alabama; Alaska; the Bridgeport, CT Fire Department; the Children's Hospital of Michigan (Detroit); the Dallas, TX Fire Department; Georgia; Kansas; Kentucky; Maryland; Massachusetts; Mississippi; Oklahoma; North Carolina; South Carolina; the St Louis, MO Fire Department; Virginia; and Washington.


Research

Research about smoke alarm technology
CDC is working with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), Underwriters’ Laboratory, the U.S. Fire Administration, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and other partners to fund research to evaluate current and prototypal smoke alarm technologies in actual fire situations in mobile homes and in one-and two-story houses. Researchers are testing the alarms’ responses in real fire situations and their resistance to nuisance alarms. An official report documenting the findings can be found at this web page: http://smokealarm.nist.gov/HSAT.pdf

Understanding Human Behavior in Residential Fires
CDC is directing development of the "Human Behavior in Fire Study" (HBFS) to identify behavioral factors in residential fires that are associated with injuries and fatalities. Researchers will interview survivors of residential fires to gather information about the sequence of events and learn more about their behaviors before, during, and after the fire. Researchers will gather and analyze data about the root cause of the fire, the events that led to an injury, the state of awareness and impairment level of those involved, and the actions taken in response to the fire. Results from this study will inform public health interventions to reduce the number of injuries and deaths related to behavioral responses in residential fires.
CDC is developing this study with the Battelle Centers for Public Health Research and Evaluation, in collaboration with the Department of Fire Protection Engineering at the University of Maryland at College Park.

Accomplishments
Funded partnership saves lives
An estimated 1,451 lives potentially have been saved since 1998 as a result of CDC-funded smoke alarm installation and fire safety education programs high-risk communities. Program staff identified high-risk homes and targeted households with children age five and younger and adults age 65 and older. Program staff have enrolled nearly 185,000 homes and installed more than 324,000 smoke alarms.

Page last modified: October 04, 2007