| Burn
Injury Awareness |
| Each February, the Burn Awareness
Coalition sponsors National Burn Injury Awareness Month. Burn
injury awareness should be practiced every day, however. Did you
know: |
-
More than
two million people suffer from serious burn injuries each year in
the United States.
-
Nationally, over 8,000 people
die each year from burn-related injuries.
-
Burns are the second leading
cause of death to children under the age of four years
-
80
percent of all burns to children
under eight years are caused by scalding.
-
Just one second of exposure to
a hot liquid can cause a life threatening injury to a child.
|
| Washington has
experienced a decline in fire death rates when compared to
national averages. Let's continue the downward
trend through fire prevention education, fire code enforcement, smoke detectors, and
home sprinkler systems. Visit the Northwest Burn Foundation web
site at: www.nwburn.org.
|
|
Burn Injury Prevention |
-
When carrying or holding
children, keep hot beverages away from the child.
-
When cooking, use the back
burners and always turn the pot handles inward.
-
Food comes out of the
microwave oven much hotter than expected. Take extra
precautions around children.
-
Never microwave a child's
bottle or allow young children to remove items from the
microwave.
-
Check the temperature of bath
water before placing your child in the tub. The recommended
temperature is 100 degrees.
-
Never leave young children
unattended in the bathtub or in the kitchen while cooking.
-
Check the temperature on your
hot water heater, the recommended setting is 102 degrees.
-
Keep appliances toward the
back of the counter top. Cords should be wound-up and
out-of-reach.
|
|
Call 9-1-1 For Help |
- Stay calm!
- Answer all questions asked by
the dispatcher as thoroughly as possible.
- Follow all instructions given
to you by the dispatcher.
- Do not hang-up the phone until
told to do so by the dispatcher.
- Keep your address and phone
number posted on or near your telephone. This is especially
important when you have out-of-town guests or a babysitter.
|