Establishing a relationship between alcohol and casualties of fire
Utgivare
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
Utgivningsår
1999
Though the rate has significantly decreased, the United States continued into the
late 90’s with one of the highest fire death rates in the industrialized world. Given the
advancements in fire prevention, including public education, building design, consumer
product safety, and sophisticated levels of the fire protection in this country, it is puzzling
to many as to why this is so. In an effort to identify the underlying problem(s),
researchers have been delving deeper into the extent to which human behavior affects our
fire losses.
The connection between alcohol and the ignition, detection, and escape from the
fire has been broadly examined by numerous medical and fire protection organization
studies. A series of landmark studies undertaken by the Johns Hopkins University and
the National Bureau of Standards in the 1970’s were among the first to discover a
definitive link between alcohol consumption and fire deaths. Many studies have now
confirmed their general findings.
Alcohol intoxication may increase the risk of initiating a fire by impairing one’s
judgment and coordination. An intoxicated individual who is smoking may also succumb
to the depressant effects of alcohol, fall asleep and drop a lit cigarette on upholstery or
clothing. Intoxication also acutely diminishes one’s ability to detect a fire. Under the
sedative effects of alcohol, an alcohol-impaired person may fail to notice the smell of
smoke, or fail to hear a smoke alarm. Escape from a fire can be hampered by the loss of
motor coordination and mental clarity caused by alcohol, even when warning signs are
heeded. Furthermore, burns are more physiologically damaging in the presence of
alcohol.
Several researchers have found that about half of all adult fire fatalities were
under the influence of alcohol at the time of the fire. Men have been found to
consistently outnumber women among fire casualties and do so with even greater
disparity for fire victims under the influence of alcohol. In addition, the younger adult
population (ages 15 to 34) seems to incur the greatest number of alcohol-impaired fire
casualties. Drinking behaviors that are characteristic of various age groups and sexes
may explain these findings.
Studies have also provided conclusive evidence supporting the deleterious effects
of chronic and acute alcohol abuse on the occurrence and recovery from burn injuries.
Burn injury victims have been found to be disproportionately likely to have been
intoxicated at the time of injury or known to be heavy drinkers. From a physiological
standpoint, burn victims with histories of alcoholism tend to have longer hospital stays,
more complications, and higher mortality rates as a result of their burns.
Questions still remain as to the extent that alcohol affects fire losses. How do we
explain the fact that some industrialized countries with some of the highest alcohol
consumption rates per capita, e.g. Germany and the Netherlands, have relatively low fire
death rates? Researchers have suggested that alcohol-related unintentional injuries have
more to do with alcohol drinking patterns than the total amount of alcohol consumed per
capita. Who drinks, where they drink, what they drink, and under what social, cultural,
and religious circumstances they drink are perhaps more significant factors than the
amount of alcohol consumed. A lone drinker at home is probably at greater risk of a fire
emergency than a group of people drinking at a bar or restaurant. Moreover, the number
of drinks consumed in a single sitting seems to matter a great deal.
Alcoholics have a disproportionately high rate of fire fatalities relative to their
percentage of the total population. Non-intoxicated fire victims also may be affected by
alcohol: they may have been entrusted to the care of an alcohol-impaired individual.
These fire fatalities would not be reported as related to alcohol when blood alcohol levels
(BALs) are taken of victims only. As a result, the estimated number of alcohol-related
fire casualties as well as the magnitude of the problem may be underestimated.
Smoking fires are the leading cause of fire fatalities. The incidence of such fatal
fires is higher among those who are under the influence of alcohol and most smokingrelated
fire fatalities have some connection to alcohol consumption.
In summary, there is a clear connection of alcohol and fire fatalities. Unlike the
connection between alcohol consumption and vehicle fatalities, the connection is not
often referred to in prevention programs, nor has much been done to address the problem.
Titel: |
Establishing a relationship between alcohol and casualties of fire |
Utgivare:
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Utgivningsår:
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1999
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Omfång:
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41 s. : ill.
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Klassificering:
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Nyckelord:
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Anmärkning:
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Statistik,
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