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        CDC Home

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        For current information, please visit http://www.cy118119.com/media/

        Press Release

        For Immediate Release: August 08, 2008
        Contact: CDC Injury Center Media Relations, Phone: 770-488-4902
        CDC Office on Smoking and Health, Phone: 770-488-5493

        Reductions in Smoking Show Promise for Reducing Home Fire Deaths

        Home fire deaths are higher in states that have a greater percentage of smokers, according to a new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) study published this month in the journal Injury Prevention. If smoking at home is reduced or stopped, fewer residential fire deaths may result, the study said.

        Smoking is the leading cause of home fire deaths and accounts for approximately one quarter of the 3,000 home fire deaths in the United States each year. Quitting smoking, as well as following fire safety recommendations related to smoking, can help reduce the risk of cigarette-related home fire deaths. For free telephone-based counseling from anywhere in the United States, smokers can call 1-800-QUIT-NOW, a national number that connects people to their state-based quit line.

        This study is the first to use national data to look at the percentage of current smokers and home fire deaths in the District of Columbia and all U.S. states except Hawaii. Nationally, an estimated 21 percent of adults smoked in 2004, with state averages ranging from 11 percent (Utah) to 28 percent (Kentucky). In that year, an estimated 2,804 individuals died in home fires, or nearly one death per 100,000 people in the United States.

        "Our study suggests that even modest reductions in overall smoking rates may save lives. In fact, quitting smoking is the most important step smokers can take to improve their overall health and that of their loved ones.??People who do smoke should smoke outside the house to help protect themselves and their families from home fires and exposure to secondhand smoke, a known human carcinogen," said Shane Diekman, Ph.D., M.P.H., a behavioral scientist at CDC's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control.

        People who continue to smoke can reduce the risk of indoor fires by adopting strict smoke-free home rules; using deep, sturdy ashtrays securely set on tables; dousing cigarette and cigar butts in water or extinguishing with sand before dumping in the trash; and never smoking in bed or leaving burning cigarettes unattended. And everyone can reduce their risk of being harmed in a residential fire by making sure to have a working smoke alarm at home and testing that alarm regularly to make sure it is working.

        "Home fire deaths have declined during the past several decades, and this decline has paralleled reductions in smoking," said Ileana Arias, Ph.D., director of CDC's Injury Center. "We work hard to keep our homes safe, and it just makes good sense to help people understand that if they can change their smoking habits, we may continue to reduce these tragedies."

        The study used CDC's Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System and the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System data.

        For more information about CDC's injury prevention efforts, please link to http://www.cy118119.com/ncipc/factsheets/fire.htm. For a copy of this study, please link to Injury Prevention's website at: http://press.psprings.co.uk/ip/august/228_ip17004.pdf

        State-level Smoking and Residential Fire Death Rates a€“ 2004 a€“ CDC

        State Deaths Population Crude Rate % Smoking

        Alabama

        76

        4501862

        1.68

        24.9

        Alaska

        8

        648510

        1.22

        24.8

        Arizona

        24

        5577784

        0.42

        18.5

        Arkansas

        61

        2726166

        2.22

        25.6

        California

        187

        35456602

        0.52

        14.8

        Colorado

        15

        4548071

        0.33

        20

        Connecticut

        26

        3485881

        0.74

        18.1

        Delaware

        10

        817827

        1.2

        24.4

        District of Columbia

        11

        557846

        1.98

        20.9

        Florida

        123

        16993369

        0.71

        20.2

        Georgia

        132

        8746849

        1.48

        20

        Idaho

        11

        1368111

        0.79

        17.4

        Illinois

        121

        12649940

        0.95

        22.2

        Indiana

        92

        6196269

        1.48

        24.9

        Iowa

        28

        2941362

        0.95

        20.8

        Kansas

        28

        2724224

        1.02

        19.8

        Kentucky

        59

        4116780

        1.42

        27.5

        Louisiana

        89

        4490380

        1.97

        23.5

        Maine

        6

        1308245

        0.46

        21

        Maryland

        62

        5512477

        1.11

        19.5

        Massachusetts

        30

        6417565

        0.47

        18.5

        Michigan

        112

        10078146

        1.11

        23.3

        Minnesota

        21

        5061662

        0.41

        20.7

        Mississippi

        79

        2880793

        2.72

        24.5

        Missouri

        87

        5718717

        1.51

        24.1

        Montana

        11

        917885

        1.19

        20.4

        Nebraska

        14

        1738013

        0.8

        20.3

        Nevada

        10

        2241700

        0.43

        23.2

        New Hampshire

        11

        1287594

        0.85

        21.7

        New Jersey

        45

        8640028

        0.52

        18.8

        New Mexico

        23

        1879252

        1.21

        20.3

        New York

        139

        19228031

        0.72

        19.9

        North Carolina

        108

        8422375

        1.26

        23.1

        North Dakota

        5

        633051

        0.79

        19.9

        Ohio

        97

        11431748

        0.85

        25.9

        Oklahoma

        59

        3504917

        1.67

        26.1

        Oregon

        32

        3562681

        0.89

        20

        Pennsylvania

        145

        12364930

        1.17

        22.7

        Rhode Island

        4

        1075729

        0.37

        21.3

        South Carolina

        88

        4146753

        2.1

        24.3

        South Dakota

        13

        764599

        1.69

        20.3

        Tennessee

        88

        5841585

        1.49

        26.2

        Texas

        176

        22099136

        0.78

        20.5

        Utah

        10

        2378696

        0.41

        10.5

        Vermont

        0

        619092

        0

        20

        Virginia

        109

        7383387

        1.46

        20.8

        Washington

        41

        6131131

        0.66

        19.2

        West Virginia

        29

        1810347

        1.6

        26.9

        Wisconsin

        48

        5471792

        0.87

        21.9

        Wyoming

        1

        501915

        0.2

        21.7

        Total

        2804

        293656842

        0.96

        20.9

        ###
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