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Fire protection of residents in care facilities

Andersson, Petra LU ; Amon, Francine and McNamee, Margaret S. LU (2013) 13th International Conference and Exhibition on Fire and Materials 2013 p.781-792
Abstract

Fires in convalescent homes and elderly care facilities represent a statistically significant threat to their residents, who tend to be less mobile and therefore less able to escape harm. This threat is expected to increase as demographics shift and more people move into this type of facility. A study has been conducted in Sweden to investigate the means by which fire protection and response can be improved with respect to burning clothing and furniture. Small scale ignition and flame spread tests were conducted on a variety of clothing articles. The heat release rate, mass loss, flame spread, and fabric temperature were measured for cotton, wool, polyester, and blended fabrics. The small scale results were used to estimate a time to... (More)

Fires in convalescent homes and elderly care facilities represent a statistically significant threat to their residents, who tend to be less mobile and therefore less able to escape harm. This threat is expected to increase as demographics shift and more people move into this type of facility. A study has been conducted in Sweden to investigate the means by which fire protection and response can be improved with respect to burning clothing and furniture. Small scale ignition and flame spread tests were conducted on a variety of clothing articles. The heat release rate, mass loss, flame spread, and fabric temperature were measured for cotton, wool, polyester, and blended fabrics. The small scale results were used to estimate a time to injury and to provide guidance for clothing ensembles that were subsequently used in full scale tests. The full scale tests consisted of a manikin having a heated circulatory system and simulated skin. Thermocouples were attached in 13 locations. The manikin was dressed in summer and winter ensembles and was seated for three tests and lying in a bed for one test. These tests were performed in a two-sided "corner" arrangement having a ceiling upon which smoke detectors were installed in two and three locations, respectively. Results of the full scale tests show that second-degree burns are likely to occur on a significant portion of the skin surface at about the same time as the smoke detectors activate. Further skin damage occurs during the ensuing time interval until help can arrive.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Clothing flammability, Elderly care homes, Fire testing, Manikin tests
pages
12 pages
conference name
13th International Conference and Exhibition on Fire and Materials 2013
conference location
San Francisco, CA, United States
conference dates
2013-01-28 - 2013-01-30
external identifiers
  • scopus:84890825088
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Copyright: Copyright 2014 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
id
540aeb38-f64f-44d6-99cf-856c1efb96da
date added to LUP
2021-09-29 14:20:07
date last changed
2022-02-02 00:08:01
@misc{540aeb38-f64f-44d6-99cf-856c1efb96da,
  abstract     = {{<p>Fires in convalescent homes and elderly care facilities represent a statistically significant threat to their residents, who tend to be less mobile and therefore less able to escape harm. This threat is expected to increase as demographics shift and more people move into this type of facility. A study has been conducted in Sweden to investigate the means by which fire protection and response can be improved with respect to burning clothing and furniture. Small scale ignition and flame spread tests were conducted on a variety of clothing articles. The heat release rate, mass loss, flame spread, and fabric temperature were measured for cotton, wool, polyester, and blended fabrics. The small scale results were used to estimate a time to injury and to provide guidance for clothing ensembles that were subsequently used in full scale tests. The full scale tests consisted of a manikin having a heated circulatory system and simulated skin. Thermocouples were attached in 13 locations. The manikin was dressed in summer and winter ensembles and was seated for three tests and lying in a bed for one test. These tests were performed in a two-sided "corner" arrangement having a ceiling upon which smoke detectors were installed in two and three locations, respectively. Results of the full scale tests show that second-degree burns are likely to occur on a significant portion of the skin surface at about the same time as the smoke detectors activate. Further skin damage occurs during the ensuing time interval until help can arrive.</p>}},
  author       = {{Andersson, Petra and Amon, Francine and McNamee, Margaret S.}},
  keywords     = {{Clothing flammability; Elderly care homes; Fire testing; Manikin tests}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{781--792}},
  title        = {{Fire protection of residents in care facilities}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}