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Risk factors for fatal residential fires

We studied fatal and nonfatal residential fires in predominantly rural areas. Using a case-control design, we compared at 151 fatal fires (cases) in single-family dwellings in North Carolina during a 13-month period with a sample of nonfatal fires (controls). Case fires were identified through the m...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Fire technology 1993-05, Vol.29 (2), p.183-193
Main Authors: RUNYAN, C. W, BANGDIWALA, S, LINZER, M. A, SACKS, J. J, BUTTS, J
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:We studied fatal and nonfatal residential fires in predominantly rural areas. Using a case-control design, we compared at 151 fatal fires (cases) in single-family dwellings in North Carolina during a 13-month period with a sample of nonfatal fires (controls). Case fires were identified through the medical-examiner system, and control fires that occurred within a few weeks of the case fires were chosen from the records of randomly selected fire departments statewide. For each fire, fire officials were interviewed about the dwelling, the fire, the people involved, and the fire-response system. Although heating incidents were the leading cause of fires, fatal fires were more likely to have been caused by smoking. Mobile homes posed a higher risk of death if a fire occurred, as did the absence of a smoke detector. Smoke detectors were more protective against death in fires involving young children and when no one present was impaired by alcohol or drugs or had a physical or mental disability. The presence of an alcohol-impaired person was the strongest independent risk factor for death in the case of a fire. In conclusion, residential fires are most likely to be caused by heating equipment or smoking materials. The risk of death is greatest in fires in mobile homes, in those involving alcohol-impaired persons, and in those in houses without smoke detectors.
ISSN:0015-2684
1572-8099
DOI:10.1007/BF01038538