Smoking may be as hazardous as ever for the lungs, but it is getting safer in one small way.
A new report from the National Fire Protection Association says that in 2008 the number of U.S. deaths in fires caused by smoking dropped to 680, the second lowest figure since 1980.
Smoking-related fires, however, injured more than 1,500 people, and caused an estimated $737 billion in property damage in 2008.
One major factor beating back the number of fire deaths is a change in the cigarette paper now mandated in 47 states (the remaining three states passed similar laws that have not yet gone into effect). This has made cigarettes less prone to ignite bedding and furniture when left unattended. Furniture and mattresses that are more resistant to fires have also played a role.
The fire protection association said the death toll may continue to drop as safety measures become more common.
“Widespread use of safeguards like fire-safe cigarettes, which can minimize or altogether prevent the damage incurred…serves as a critical step for further reducing the nation’s fire problem,” said Lorraine Carli, the group’s vice president of communications.
The report says that the most common area for a smoke to turn into a fatal fire is the bedroom, and that the best way to avoid such catastrophes is by smoking exclusively outside.
The lowest number of deaths on record for smoking-related fires is 640, from 2002.
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Perhaps it’s time to hold smokers who cause fatal fires a bit more accountable, a bit more responsible. Have involuntary manslaughter charges ever been filed against a smoker who caused a fatal fire? I don’t see any difference between causing a fatality via carelessness with a cigarette and causing a fatality by inattentive or reckless driving.
I am especially concerned as a former tax-paying resident of the state of Maine where a fire that killed two little boys, and started by a discarded cigarette, was pinned by the local law on the new landlord who did not have an operating smoke detector (batteries removed). Nothing was said about the person who started the fire! In another case a young, new teenage driver caused a fatal accident. There were no drugs or alcohol involved, she was an inexperienced juvenile who lost control of her vehicle. Nevertheless, she was send to Maine’s junvenile prison system.
Are smokers who cause fires ever held accountable?