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Repair & ImproveEnhancing Home Fire Safety – The Case For Wireless TechnologyA Review of Recent Studies
Although significant progress has been made in the United States in reducing the number of deaths caused by accidental fires in the home, these incidents still kill more than 3,000 individuals each year. Better education about the dangers of fire and wider use of smoke alarms are generally credited with reducing the total number of fatalities associated with accidental fires in the home, but experts agree a number of obstacles prevent that total from being reduced further. Recent research indicates that certain populations (the elderly, those with impaired hearing) have difficulty hearing conventional smoke alarm frequencies. Additional research indicates that small children may sleep too soundly to wake to the sound of these alarms. A fire that starts near these individuals may prove fatal – either because the victims do not hear the alarm, or because those who are able to respond to the alarm are located too far away to hear it promptly and act quickly. Currently, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) recommends installing a smoke alarm on every level of the home. The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) urges that alarms be installed “... on every level of the home and outside all sleeping areas.” NFPA further recommends installing smoke alarms “in every room where people sleep.” These guidelines go far to protect families, but may not effectively address the issues described above. Most significantly, independently operating smoke alarms only sound when the units are directly exposed to smoke. Other units in the home may not sound until smoke concentrations have reached lethal levels. The chance to reach sound sleepers or hearing-impaired occupants nearest the fire’s origin may pass before other family members hear the alarm. To address this problem, since 1993, building codes have required that all new homes include “hardwired” smoke alarm systems, connected to the home’s electrical system. (Since 1996, codes have required these systems to include “battery backup” protection so that the units will operate during power outages.) In homes with these systems, when one smoke alarm sounds, all the alarms sound, thus increasing the amount of time to escape from a fire and/or reach those who may not hear the alarm. Despite these new regulations, an estimated 90 million homes – those built before 1993 – remain without the protection of interconnected smoke alarm systems. Retrofitting these homes is possible, but involves rewiring and other expense. A new solution, wireless interconnected smoke alarm systems, is on the verge of commercialization. What the Research Reveals “A Review of the Sound Effectiveness of Residential Smoke Alarms,” U.S. Consumer Products Safety Commission, December 2004 -- In 2003, CPCS undertook a study to look specifically at how effective smoke alarms are in waking older adults. The study was subsequently broadened to look at whether smoke alarms are effective in waking children. The agency found:
Most important, the study concluded, “Interconnected alarms can provide earlier warning of smoke and fire.” With earlier warning, occupants have more time to act, and a better chance to escape. “U.S. Experience with Smoke Alarms and other Fire Protection/Alarm Equipment,” National Fire Protection Association, November 2004 --
And finally, the report notes, “Wireless technology that uses radio frequency as a means to interconnect battery powered smoke alarms is being tested…. Costs have fallen for many types of technical equipment. Should this prove true for these smoke alarms, it would offer the potential advantages of interconnectivity with less expense and installation effort than with traditional hard-wired smoke alarms and allow the alarm to sound throughout the home.” “The Effectiveness of Different Alarms in Waking Sleeping Children,” Dorothy Bruck, Sharnie Reid, Jefoon Kouzma and Michelle Ball, School of Psychology, Victoria University, Melbourne, date TBD These studies looked various aspects of human response to smoke alarm signals. Among the conclusions:
The Wireless Option
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