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Summary: CarbonMonoxide and Smoke Detectors


Protect your family and yourself!

Carbon Monoxide Detectors Save 2 Different Families


BOYNTON BEACH, Fla.  — WPBF.com

Two different carbon monoxide scares, just two weeks apart, leave elderly couples thankful they had detectors for the noxious gas in their homes.

The first happened Nov. 11 in The Grove community just east of Florida’s Turnpike.

Sam Okun had his 6-year-old grandson visiting and had spent some time entertaining the boy. When they returned home, Okun thought he turned off the keyless ignition to his late model Lexus. But he had not.

“I could’ve sworn I put the car off; I turned the car off,” said Okun.

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Hours later with his girlfriend asleep in one room and his grandson asleep in another, the home’s two carbon monoxide detectors went off. The family evacuated.

The Jacobs family of Venetian Isles in Boynton Beach had a similar scare Thanksgiving morning.

Sheilah Jacobs got distracted and forgot to turn of the engine of her Hyundai sedan. Hours later the home’s carbon monoxide detector sounded the alarm. The family evacuated safely.

“We’re hoping that stories like this and what happened in the other residence in a two-week period will wake people up and

Article source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45468052/ns/local_news-west_palm_beach_fl/t/carbon-monoxide-detectors-save-different-families/

The Original Post is Located Here: Carbon Monoxide Detectors Save 2 Different Families

Date Published: Dec 02, 2011 - 10:49 am



SoCalGas Offers Safety Tips to Prevent Carbon Monoxide Poisoning


LOS ANGELES, Dec. 1, 2011 — /PRNewswire/ – The recent cold weather in Southern California has caused people to turn up their furnaces and, for some, be exposed to potential carbon monoxide poisoning. Southern California Gas Co. (SoCalGas) is urging customers to ensure home heating equipment is operating safely by having their appliances checked by a licensed, qualified professional.

“While carbon monoxide poisoning incidents are rare, we usually see a rise in the number of occurrences when the weather gets really cold,” said Bret Lane, vice president of field services for SoCalGas. “Often, the cause of carbon monoxide in a home is due to a faulty furnace, so we’re urging customers to be safe and have their furnaces inspected if they have not yet done so.”

The utility also warns against using ovens, ranges or outdoor barbecues for home heating. These appliances are not designed for such use and pose a severe and potentially fatal risk of carbon monoxide poisoning if used for space heating.

Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is formed when carbon-based fuels, such as kerosene, gasoline, propane, natural gas, oil, charcoal or

Article source: http://www.sacbee.com/2011/12/01/4092914/socalgas-offers-safety-tips-to.html

The Original Post is Located Here: SoCalGas Offers Safety Tips to Prevent Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

Date Published: Dec 02, 2011 - 4:24 am



Carbon monoxide safety tips issued – Topeka Capital


After the death earlier this week of a man who apparently was overcome by fumes when a portable generator was running inside the abandoned house in which he was seeking shelter, Topeka Fire Department officials have released safety tips related to carbon monoxide poisoning.

Often called the “silent killer,” carbon monoxide is an invisible, odorless, colorless gas created when such fuels as gasoline, wood, coal, natural gas, propane, oil or methane burn incompletely.

In the home, heating and cooking equipment that burn fuel can be sources of carbon monoxide.

In conjunction with the National Fire Protection Association, Topeka Fire Marshal Greg Bailey this week issued safety tips regarding carbon monoxide.

Among the tips:

– Install a battery-operated carbon monoxide detector in your home and check or replace the battery when you change the time on your clocks each spring and fall.

– Read and follow the manufacturer’s instructions for placement and appropriate mounting height of your carbon monoxide alarms.

– Test alarms at least once a month and replace them according to the manufacturer’s instructions.

– If your alarm sounds, immediately leave your home and move to a fresh air location outdoors or by an open window or door, and make sure everyone inside the home is

Article source: http://cjonline.com/news/2011-11-30/carbon-monoxide-safety-tips-issued

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The Original Post is Located Here: Carbon monoxide safety tips issued – Topeka Capital

Date Published: Nov 30, 2011 - 3:45 pm


Carbon monoxide safety tips issued


After the death earlier this week of a man who apparently was overcome by fumes when a portable generator was running inside the abandoned house in which he was seeking shelter, Topeka Fire Department officials have released safety tips related to carbon monoxide poisoning.

Often called the “silent killer,” carbon monoxide is an invisible, odorless, colorless gas created when fuels such as gasoline, wood, coal, natural gas, propane, oil or methane burn incompletely.

In the home, heating and cooking equipment that burn fuel can be sources of carbon monoxide.

In conjunction with the National Fire Protection Association, Topeka Fire Marshal Greg Bailey this week issued several safety tips regarding carbon monoxide.

Among the tips:

– Install a battery-operated carbon monoxide detector in your home and check or replace the battery when you change the time on your clocks each spring and fall.

– Read and follow the manufacturer’s instructions for placement and appropriate mounting height of your carbon monoxide alarms.

– Test alarms at least once a month and replace them according to the manufacturer’s instructions.

– If your alarm sounds, immediately leave your home and move to a fresh air location outdoors or by an open window or door, and make sure everyone inside the home is accounted for. Call for help from a fresh air location and stay there until emergency personnel arrive and determine that it is safe to return inside.

– If you need to warm a vehicle, remove it from the garage immediately after starting it. Do not run a vehicle or other fueled engines or motors indoors, even if garage doors are open.

During and after a snowstorm, make sure vents for the dryer, furnace, stove and fireplace are clear of snow build-up. Also, make sure the exhaust pipe of a running vehicle is not covered with snow.

– Never use a generator, charcoal grill, camp stove, or other gasoline or charcoal-burning device inside your home, basement or garage, or near a window.

– Never burn anything in a stove or fireplace that isn’t vented and never attempt to heat your home with a gas oven.

– Seek prompt medical attention if you suspect carbon monoxide poisoning and are feeling dizzy, light-headed, or nauseous.

Emergency responders early Monday were called to a residence at 421 S.E. Pinecrest that was supposed to be unoccupied after an occupant reported an odd odor in the residence.

The man who called 911 reported he was feeling dizzy and that he had found another occupant unconscious in the residence.

American Medical Response was called to the scene, and the unconscious occupant was pronounced dead at the scene.

A generator was running inside the residence to heat the house, which was supposed to be unoccupied.

A sign next to the door of the residence said it was “unsafe to occupy” and occupation would be considered a misdemeanor offense.

The Original Post is Located Here: Carbon monoxide safety tips issued

Date Published: Nov 30, 2011 - 9:41 am


Carbon monoxide detector saves lives of suburban Boynton Beach residents


Sam Okun says he could have sworn he turned off his keyless Lexus after parking it in his garage.

“In fact, I was absolutely sure I did,” said Okun, 82, as he sat in his suburban Boynton Beach home on Monday.

On Nov. 10, Okun, his 6-year-old grandson Hunter, and his girlfriend, Arlene Schwartz, came home about 7:30 p.m. after having dinner with Hunter’s mother. Hunter was tucked into bed about 9 p.m., and Schwartz went to sleep at about midnight. A half-hour later, as Okun sat at his computer, the carbon monoxide detector’s alarm sounded.

CarbonmonoxidedetectorsaveslivesofsuburbanBoyntonBeachresidents

“The big thing is that everything is OK,” Schwartz, 84, said.

Were it not for the carbon monoxide detector, things wouldn’t have been, said Palm Beach County Fire- Rescue Capt. Don DeLucia.

“These people didn’t get sick, because the detector went off before it got to that point,” DeLucia said. “It did what it was supposed to do.”

So far this year, Palm Beach County Fire-Rescue crews have responded to eight calls about carbon monoxide poisoning where residents needed medical attention. That includes the call from Okun’s home and another call last week from a house less than 5 miles away. Last year, fire-rescue crews responded to 11 calls.

Last week’s call came in just after midnight on Thanksgiving from the Venetian Isles complex in suburban Boynton Beach. The detector went off in the home of Irwin Jacobs, 84, and his 73-year-old wife Sheilah. Investigators determined that their car had been running in the garage since 8 p.m. the night before.

“I already had gone to bed, and that’s when it went off,” Sheilah Jacobs said. “I would have gone to sleep and probably would never have awakened.”

The couple bought their detector in 2009 after their neighbor died of carbon monoxide poisoning.

Keyless cars, like Okun’s, in some cases are the source of the carbon monoxide. “It is easier to leave that type of vehicle running,” DeLucia said.

Okun said he doesn’t hear the motor when his car is running.

Once the alarm sounded, Schwartz grabbed Hunter and led him out of the house. Okun ran into the garage to turn the car off. Schwartz then ran back into the house to call 911.

DeLucia said they should not have gone back into the house or the garage. Instead, they should have gone to a neighbor’s. When Schwartz and Okun were admitted to Bethesda Memorial Hospital, doctors found carbon monoxide in their blood, but not in Hunter’s.

Okun and Schwartz call the scare a “wake up call” and have recommended to others that they buy a carbon monoxide detector.

Their neighbor, 86-year-old Rose Needleman, doesn’t have one yet.

“I never thought of it,” she said while in Okun’s and Schwartz’s home.

“Get it today,” Schwartz said firmly. “All you do is plug it in.”

The Original Post is Located Here: Carbon monoxide detector saves lives of suburban Boynton Beach residents

Date Published: Nov 28, 2011 - 9:06 pm


Carbon Monoxide Detectors Save 2 Different Families


POSTED: 3:36 pm EST November 28, 2011UPDATED: 3:57 pm EST November 28, 2011

Article source: http://www.wpbf.com/news/29873042/detail.html

The Original Post is Located Here: Carbon Monoxide Detectors Save 2 Different Families

Date Published: Nov 28, 2011 - 3:05 pm


20 Suffer Carbon Monoxide Poisoning at Thanksgiving Party in Chicago


Body Mind – HEALTH

Published November 25, 2011| NewsCore

The Original Post is Located Here: 20 Suffer Carbon Monoxide Poisoning at Thanksgiving Party in Chicago

Date Published: Nov 27, 2011 - 2:39 am


Carbon monoxide poisoning sends family to hospital


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St. Louis (KSDK)– A woman and her two young children were rushed to the hospital overnight, victims of carbon monoxide poisoning.

St. Louis firefighters were called to a home on Quincy Street around 10:30 p.m. Friday to investigate a sick call.

The woman, and kids ages 3 and 6 had flu like symptoms. Firefighters determined they were suffering from carbon monoxide poisoning. The fumes came from a gas generator running in the basement.

All are expected to recover.

The family did not have a carbon monoxide detector.  Firefighters recommend every home have working smoke and carbon monoxide detectors. First responders also say if several members of your household come down with sudden flu-like symptoms call 911 immediately.

 

 

 

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Article source: http://www.ksdk.com/news/article/287898/1/Carbon-monoxide-poisoning-sends-family-to-hospital

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The Original Post is Located Here: Carbon monoxide poisoning sends family to hospital

Date Published: Nov 26, 2011 - 8:30 pm


20 suffer carbon monoxide poisoning from indoor grill


Twenty people suffered carbon monoxide poisoning at a Thanksgiving party in the Kilbourn Park neighborhood after someone used a charcoal grill inside a home Thursday night, a spokesman for the Chicago Fire Department said.

Seven people were transported in good-to-fair and fair-to-serious conditions to area hospitals from the single-family home on the 4300 block of West Roscoe Street, said Larry Langford, a spokesman for the department.

The victims were transported to West Suburban Medical Center and Our Lady of the Resurrection Medical Center, he said.

Thirteen others were treated at the scene, Langford said. The incident happened before 11 p.m.

chicagobreaking@tribune.com

Article source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-20-people-suffer-carbon-monoxide-poisoning-20111124,0,2426633.story

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The Original Post is Located Here: 20 suffer carbon monoxide poisoning from indoor grill

Date Published: Nov 25, 2011 - 8:16 am


Carbon monoxide nearly kills two Allentown residents found unconscious in …


A malfunctioning oil burner filled an Allentown row house with carbon monoxide, overcoming two residents who were found unconscious by a third resident around 10:40 p.m. Tuesday, a city fire official said.

“It could have been fatal,” Capt. Phil Atiyeh said.

Had the third resident not returned to the home at 513 W. Green St., the other two residents would have continued to

Article source: http://www.mcall.com/news/local/police/mc-allentown-house-carbon-monoxide-20111124,0,4610529.story

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The Original Post is Located Here: Carbon monoxide nearly kills two Allentown residents found unconscious in …

Date Published: Nov 25, 2011 - 2:14 am


 
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