NFPA Journal - September/October 2013 - (Page 40)
>>outreach
advocacy, legislative, and PUBlic edUcation neWs
Maria Figueroa
Older, Wiser, Protected
F
W
irst graf. I started my career in
hen
the fire service in 1983, I
learned how to fight fires,
extricate people from car wrecks and
Body
submerged vehicles, and provide life
support. Community fire risk reduction was not part of the fire service
curriculum.
Later, I began to realize how fire
affected some people more than
EvEn if my aging parents
are properly warned by a
smoke alarm in the night,
they may not have the time
they need to escape from
their home during a fire.
others, including older adults who
were dying in fires at a higher rate
than the general population. But it
wasn’t until 1995, when I joined the
this is a call-out.
fire prevention division of my fire
department in Miami-Dade County,
Florida, that it all came together. I
understood how code compliance,
coupled with public education,
could reduce community risk. I
began to study the issue of older
adults and fire, and I implemented
a program to distribute and install
smoke alarms in their homes.
I became a member of NFPA and
began participating in the organization’s high-risk community outreach
initiatives., where I learned more
about the fire problem among older
adults. According to NFPA statistics, while the number of home fire
deaths decreased between 1980
and 2007, the share of home fire
victims age 65 and over increased
during that period, from 19 percent
to 29 percent. That trend will likely
40
NFPA JOURNAL JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2011
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2013
continue as the country’s aging
population grows over the next few
decades. According to forecasts
developed by the U.S. Census
Bureau, people 65 years or older
are expected to comprise 19 percent of the population by 2030,
compared to just under 14 percent in 2012.
I began to worry about my own
parents’ increased fire risk as they
became affected by the infirmities
of age. I made sure that they had the
right smoke and carbon monoxide
alarms. But my worries did not end
there. My father’s memory is failing, and my mother is mobility
impaired. They both take
sleep aids before going to
bed. Even if they are properly warned by a smoke alarm, they
may not have the time they need to
escape from their home during a fire.
In May, the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) issued
its fiscal year report to Congress. The
document, Impact of an Aging Population on Fire and Emergency Medical
Services, explains that fire and emergency medical services will have
to find a way to meet the increased
demand for services for older adults,
which the report describes as being
at a “much higher fire risk than the
rest of the population.”
FEMA’s recommendations to
reduce that risk include increasing
educational outreach, integrating
new smoke alarm technologies in
model codes for homes, and more. It
describes installing fire sprinklers as
“the most effective fire safety feature
that can be added to a home.”
According to AARP, older Americans consistently express a desire
to age in place—meaning in their
homes—and there are numerous initiatives for home design to
accommodate this. But I have not
found one that takes fire risk into
consideration or recommends the
installation of fire sprinklers.
It is imperative that life safety
professionals engage those setting
public policy and designing and
building homes for the older population in issues of fire safety. We
need to educate them about the
importance of home fire sprinklers so that this technology can
be included in aging-in-place initiatives. Millions of aging
Americans deserve to enjoy the
rest of their lives in new homes
fully protected by this national
model code requirement.
MARIA FIGUEROA is communications
project manager for nFPa’s Fire
sprinkler initiative.
Photograph:
Artwork: Shutterstock
The aging population and the need for home fire sprinklers
Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of NFPA Journal - September/October 2013
NFPA Journal - September/October 2013
Contents
First Word
In a Flash
Perspectives
Firewatch
Heads Up
Research
Structural Ops
In Compliance
Buzzwords
Outreach
Electrical Safety
Wildfire Watch
Cover Story: Furniture Flamability
Special Report
NFPA Reports
NFPA Reports
Fire Analysis + Research
Section Spotlight
What’s Hot
Looking Back
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