Protect Your Home Against Fire…Planning Saves Lives

  • Never leave small children alone in the home, even for a minute.

  • Install smoke alarms in furnace and sleeping areas. Check batteries once a month. It is best to use alarms with long-life batteries, but if these are not available, change the batteries at least yearly.

  • Plan several escape routes from each room in the house. Plan a place to meet right after leaving the house.

  • Conduct home fire drills so everyone knows how to get out in an emergency.

  • Do not smoke in bed.

  • Dispose of cigarette butts, matches, and ashes with care.

  • Keep matches and lighters away from children.

  • Be sure your gas water heater is off the ground. Spilled flammable liquids will be ignited by the pilot light.

  • When using candles, place them on a sturdy surface out of reach of children. Never leave a candle burning unattended.

  • Place a barrier around open flames.

  • Do not wear loose-fitting clothing near a stove, fireplace, or open space heater.

  • Have your heating system checked and cleaned yearly.

  • Check electric appliances and cords regularly for wear or loose connections.

  • Use only 15-ampere fuses for lighting circuits. Never use a substitute for a fuse.

  • Place fire extinguishers around the home where the risk of fire is greatest—in the kitchen and furnace room and near the fireplace.

In Case of Fire

  • Get everyone outside right away. Go to your planned meeting place.

  • Do not stop to dress or put out the fire. (Most deaths occur from suffocation due to hot fumes and smoke, not from direct burning.)

  • Call the fire department from a neighbor’s house or mobile phone.

Patient education handouts from TIPP—The Injury Prevention Program help pediatricians implement injury prevention counseling for parents of children newborn through 12 years of age.

The information in this publication should not be used as a substitute for the medical care and advice of your pediatrician. There may be variations in treatment that your pediatrician may recommend based on individual facts and circumstances.

Copyright © American Academy of Pediatrics Date Updated: Nov 17 2024 20:38 Version 0.1

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Is Your Child Sick?®

latest news

starfish
February 12, 2026
There have been cases of measles in NC, with exposures in Chapel Hill, Durham, and Wake County. We can give the MMR dose early to families who want it. This applies to infants 6-12 months who have not gotten a dose yet or kids under 4-5 years who have not gotten their second MMR dose. At this time, the NC DHHS and health departments are not recommending this unless traveling or living in an area with sustained transmission. Two doses of the MMR vaccine are highly effective (97%) at preventing measles infections. At CHCAC, children receive their first dose at 12 months of age and a second dose at 4 years of age, ensuring they are fully protected as soon as possible, in accordance with the most up-to-date AAP recommendations. Some infants aged 6 months to 11 months who travel internationally or in high-prevalence areas may need a dose to protect them; however, they still require the 1-year and 4-year-old doses as well. If you are ever concerned about a possible exposure to measles, please CALL before entering our office. DO NOT ENTER the office. NC DHHS keeps a list of areas with measles exposures here . This is a highly contagious illness, and special precautions must be taken to prevent spread. The virus can be present in the air for 2 hours after an infected person is in the room, and 90% of susceptible patients can be infected. As always, if you have questions, we are here to help make sense of it all!