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SUMMER RECREATION

 

 

   OVERVIEW
 

Summer safety awareness is essential to ensure happy events are injury-free. Fire and burn injuries do not take a summer vacation. Summer is a special time of year, a time of the year that young and old look forward to spend time outside and family with friends.

 

Summertime should be a time to have fun. Knowing a few safety tips and following these recommendations can help ensure it will be safe as well as fun.

 
 
Common Summer Burns:
  • Boating related
    • Camping related
    • Fireworks
    • Gasoline
    • Grills
    • Lightning
    • Sunburn

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Human and Property Costs of Summer Burns 

 

In the United States:

  • According to the National Fire Protection Association, there are about 6,000 reported home fires involving gas or charcoal grills leading to $30 million in direct property damage. Most of the gas fires and explosions were caused by gas leaks blocked tubes or overfilled propane tanks.

  • Fireworks injure more than 12,000 Americans and are also a cause of many fires. More than half of these injuries occur during the first week of July. Even legal fireworks can be very dangerous.
  • Improper use of fireworks causes more than 6,000 fires and more than $8 million in property damage each year in the U.S.
  • Lightning is one of the deadliest of nature’s forces – more deadly than any other storms. Every year about 1,200 people are struck by lightning causing more than 100 deaths.
 
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  1.  National Fire Protection Association Summer Safety Fact Sheet, Quincy, MA, 2001

  2. National Fire Data Center 0-USFA - "Fireworks and Barbecues Makes July a Dangerous Month" Press Release June 21, 2000

  3. Unites States Fire Administration - "During or after a Disaster Summer Storms Fire Safety Facts Sheets", September 8, 1998. 

  

Safety First:

The first step to ensuring a safer outdoor environment is to enhance our awareness of the risks and to discover and correct potential burn and fire hazards that can turn a summer vacation into sorrow.

Camping plays an important role for people who enjoy outdoor activities. The warm weather encourages more outdoor cooking and with young children playing around campfires, they become more vulnerable to burn injuries. Our bright summer days may put smiles on our faces, but these smiles can turn to frowns when a young child get sunburn from not being properly protected from the sun.

 

The Nature and Characteristics of Burns

A burn is damage to the skin and underlying tissue caused by heat, chemicals or electricity - a very simplistic definition for a very complex injury. Burns damage or destroy one or more layers of the skin. Deeper burns may involve the fat, muscle or bone.

 

The temperature to which the skin is exposed and the length of time the skin is exposed to the burning substance determines the depth of the injury. Burns range in severity from minor injuries that require no medical treatment to serious, life-threatening or fatal injuries. Burns are categorized in terms of degrees, which are described below. Partial thickness injuries to the skin include first and second degree burns; full thickness injuries encompass third degree and deeper burns.

 

Type of Burns:

Characteristics:

Superficial Burn (first degree)

  • Causes: sunburn, minor scalds

  • Generally heals in 3 to 5 days with no scarring.

  • Minor damage to the skin, painful

  • Color – pink to red

  • Skin is dry without blisters

Partial Thickness Burn (second degree)

  • Damages but does not destroy the top two layers of the skin

  • Generally heal in 10 to 21 days

  • Skin in moist, wet and weepy

  • Blisters are present

  • Color – bright pink to cherry red

  • Lots of edema (sweeping)

  • Very painful

Full Thickness Burn (third degree)

  • Destroys all layers of the skin

  • May involve fat, muscle and bone

  • Will require surgery for healing

  • Skin may be bright red or dry and lathery, charred, waxy white, tan or brown

  • Charred veins may be visible

  • Area is insensate – the person is unable to feel touch in areas of full thickness injury

 

 

Supported by the International Association of Fire Fighters

 

 

 


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