Carbon monoxide

PROTECT YOURSELF AND YOUR FAMILY FROM THE SILENT KILLER!

 

What is Carbon Monoxide (CO)?

You can't see it, hear it, taste it, or smell it.

Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless, extremely poisonous and explosive gas which causes 1,500 accidental deaths and more than 10,000 injuries each year.  CO is slightly lighter than air and mixes throughout the atmosphere.  It is a by product of incomplete combustion, produced when fuels such as natural gas, propane, heating oil, kerosene, coal charcoal, gasoline, or wood are burned with insufficient air.

What are the Effects of CO Poisoning?

 Mild Exposure:  Flu like symptoms including slight headache, nausea, vomiting, and fatigue.

Medium Exposure: Severe headache, drowsiness, confusion, and a fast heart rate.  Prolonged exposure to medium levels of CO can result in death.

Extreme Exposure: Loss of consciousness, convulsions, heart, and lung failure, possible brain damage, and death.

While everyone is at risk for CO poisoning, unborn babies, infants and young children, senior citizens, and people with heart and lung problems are at a higher risk due to their greater oxygen needs.

   What are Some of the Sources of CO?

Gas Stoves,  Hot Water Heaters,

            Gas or Oil Heaters,  Charcoal Grills

Gas Space Heaters, Wood Burning Stoves

Fireplaces,  Lawnmowers, Pilot Lights

Car Exhaust Fumes,  Tobacco Smoke

 

How to Prevent CO Poisoning

There are many simple precautions you can take to protect your family from this silent killer.

 

What Features to look for when Choosing a CO Detector:

 Installing your CO Detector

Install CO Detectors near bedroom areas and family rooms.  Do not install them near air vents or fans.  Place them in the center of the room where they can measure the overall general atmosphere.  For extra protection, place one about fifteen feet away from your home's heat source.  To avoid nuisance alarms do not put a CO detector in the kitchen, garage, utility room, basement, bathroom or unventilated rooms where cleaning supplies are kept.  Chemical fumes, humidity and very hot or very cold temperatures will affect the performance of a detector.

Maintaining your CO Detector

Keep your CO detectors dust free by vacuuming air vents regularly.  Test your CO Detectors each week simply by pressing the Test/Silence button to make sure that the alarm sounds.  If the detector ever fails to test properly, have it repaired or replaced immediately.

 

What to do if your Alarm Sounds

If the alarm sounds and anyone in the house has symptoms of CO poisoning:

If your alarm goes off and no one has symptoms of CO poisoning: