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Safety overhaul calls for smoke alarms in every bedroom

A smoke alarm in every bedroom would help save victims from the most deadly type of residential fires, but a shocking number of Victorians sleep in rooms without an alarm.

Killer fires have spurred a major overhaul of safety guidelines which will now recommend every bedroom is fitted with a smoke alarm.

Bedroom blazes have caused the most residential fire fatalities and injuries over the last decade.

But less than a fifth of Victorians sleep in rooms with a smoke alarm.

The Country Fire Authority and Metropolitan Fire Brigade will tomorrow announce new advice recommending every bedroom as well as hallways and living areas have smoke alarms which all sound when one is triggered.

Previously alarms were only deemed necessary outside bedrooms and in hallways.

A quarter of fatal fires in the last decade started in bedrooms — claiming 22 lives and leaving 117 people seriously injured.

Less than a fifth of Victorians sleep in rooms with a smoke alarm. Picture: Stock image
Less than a fifth of Victorians sleep in rooms with a smoke alarm. Picture: Stock image

CFA chief officer Steve Warrington told the Herald Sun: “It’s really important that you have a smoke alarm in your bedroom, especially if you sleep with the door closed.”

“Your sense of smell decreases while you sleep and a working smoke alarm in the bedroom can mean the difference between life and death,’’ Mr Warrington said.

New research shows only 16 per cent of 2500 Victorians aged 18-64 surveyed had a smoke alarm in their bedroom.

A fifth had only one smoke alarm in their entire home.

MFB chief officer Greg Leach said: “Many of the house fires we attend occur overnight — often at a time when people are asleep.”

“If you don’t have a smoke alarm in your bedroom and fire breaks out at the other end of the home, by the time the smoke gets into your bedroom, it may be too late,’’ Mr Leach said.

Authorities will launch a new advertising campaign highlighting the silent stealth of bedroom fires.

The new advice of having a smoke alarm in every sleeping area is the biggest change to fire safety advice in five years.

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“Our sense of smell is diminished as we sleep, so a smoke alarm in the bedroom provides a vital early warning that could save your life,’’ Emergency Services Minister Lisa Neville said.

“Silence is deadly in the event of a fire, and it’s so important to remember that only working smoke alarms save lives.”

Fires originating in lounge rooms accounted for a fifth of fatal blazes in the last decade ahead of those which started in the kitchen.

wes.hosking@news.com.au

@weshosking

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Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/safety-overhaul-calls-for-smoke-alarms-in-every-bedroom/news-story/422610808272eacf37a41c2c692d45e6