
Fire is a good tool but sometimes it can move out of our control and begin damaging property and injuring people. We often think of fire as pleasant, warm and useful...and it usually is. But, when it is out of control, fire and smoke are hot, dark, poisonous, and move quickly! It is important to know what to do when fire is beyond your control or causing injury.
Fire Drills
Make a plan to get out of your home, school, and workplace. Practice your plan twice each year. For more on fire drill plans, see Planning a Home Fire Drill.
Home Fire Sprinklers
Home fire sprinklers save lives. Eight out of ten fire deaths in the U.S. occur in the home. If you have a fire in the home, the risk of dying is cut by about 80 percent with automatic fire sprinklers. For more information on home fire sprinklers, see Home Fire Sprinklers.
Smoke Alarms
Dual sensor smoke alarms installed on every floor and in every bedroom, interconnected so that when one sounds they all sound, provides your family with the earliest notice of a fire. For more see Smoke Alarms.
Carbon Monoxide Alarms
Carbon monoxide is a clear, odorless and very poisonous gas that is released during combustion. Having a working carbon monoxide alarm on every level of your home can save a life. For more see Carbon Monoxide Alarms
Stop, Drop, and Roll
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If your clothes catch fire, STOP immediately,
DROP (to the ground, cover your face with hands), and
ROLL (over and over or back and forth) to put out the fire!!
Burns
Prevent scalds and burns in the kitchen.
Hot tap water and scald burns
Treatment of burns
—on the face, hands, feet, major joints or genital area.
— white, tight, dry (leathery) or painless.
— caused by chemicals or electricity.
— not healing in 2 to 3 days, becomes foul smelling, develops thick drainage, redness or swelling around the burn, or causes a fever.
Fire Extinguishers

Portable fire extinguishers have limits. Learn and practice how to use fire extinguishers before a fire occurs.
For more great fire safety and fire prevention tips, view the National Messages Advisory Committee’s recommendations.