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Injury Prevention Experts Offer Safety Tips as Temperatures Drop

Things are heating up.

As temperatures drop, more residents are turning up the heat to stay warm.

Injury Prevention experts at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt want to raise awareness on the importance of safely heating your home.

Many heating sources for homes and businesses have the potential to create fire and electrical hazards, said Purnima Unni, Pediatric Trauma Injury Prevention Program manager at Monroe Carell Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt.

“Covid-19 has created a different home environment for everyone,” said Unni. “Many people are working remotely. Most children are participating in virtual learning. With pandemic restrictions in place, there are more people in the home during a time when it would traditionally be empty.

“Folks are needing to stay warm. And for some who are not working, they are trying to figure out how to stay warm on less income.”

Unni said the challenge of keeping warm might lead to the use of unsafe heating sources. This, she said, can create fire and electrical hazards. And while most are focused on Covid-19 and the flu, there is another potentially deadly factor to also consider — carbon monoxide, known as the silent killer.

“During this time, it is so important that people know what heating sources are the safest and which ones to steer clear from to prevent a potentially hazardous situation,” she stressed.

According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, an average of 170 people die every year in the United States from carbon monoxide poisoning from non-automobile consumer products. These include malfunctioning fuel-burning appliances such as furnaces, ranges, water heaters and room heaters; engine-powered equipment such as portable generators; fireplaces; and charcoal burned in homes and other enclosed areas.

Quick tips to avoid carbon monoxide poisoning include:

 

Safety tips for heating and electrical equipment: