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This week is Winter Hazard Safety week. Each day is devoted to a different topic concerning winter safety. To help with the effort, cities across the state are holding forums, providing daily winter safety tips and publicizing the effort in local newspapers and on city websites.

The week is broken down as:

What is Carbon Monoxide (CO)?

Carbon monoxide (CO) is an odorless, colorless gas often formed in the process of incomplete combustion of organic substances, including fuels. It is dangerous because it interferes with normal oxygen uptake for humans and other living organisms needing oxygen to live.

Why should I be concerned about Carbon Monoxide (CO)?

CO is a gas that can build up to dangerous concentrations indoors when fuel- burning devices are not properly vented, operated, or maintained. Because it has no odor, color or taste, CO cannot be detected by our senses. It is estimated that unintentional CO exposure accounts for an estimated 500 deaths in the United States each year. Poisoning contributes annually to more than 2,000 deaths in the United States.1 In addition, the US Consumer Product Safety Commission estimates that 8,000 to 15,000 people each year are examined or treated in hospitals for non-fire related CO poisoning. Breathed over long periods of time, low concentrations of CO may also contribute to other illness. Fortunately, simple measures can be taken to prevent CO problems. One such action is the installation of a CO alarm to detect potentially deadly conditions.

1Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, MMWR, 56(50)1309-1312;December 21, 2007.

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What are the sources of CO?

In general, CO is produced when any material burns. More is produced when there isn’t enough oxygen for efficient burning. Common sources of CO in homes include fuel-burning devices such as: furnaces, gas or kerosene space heaters, boilers, gas cooking stoves, water heaters, clothes dryers, fireplaces, charcoal grills, wood stoves, lawn mowers, power generators, camp stoves, motor vehicles and some power tools with internal combustion engines. Smoking is another common source of CO that can negatively impact indoor air quality.

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What concentrations of CO are typical in the home?

Ideally, CO concentrations indoors are expected to be the same as CO concentrations outdoors. In the Minneapolis/St. Paul area, CO concentration in the outdoor air ranges from 0.03-2.5 parts per million parts (ppm). This is averaged over an 8-hour period. These averages are below the federal standard of 9 ppm for CO in outdoor air. In general, concentrations are lower in rural areas and higher in urban areas. Finding CO concentrations higher indoors than outdoors indicates an indoor source of CO, or a source very close to your home.

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How can I protect myself and my family from CO poisoning?

Simple measures can be taken to prevent CO problems. Make sure that all your fuel burning appliances and heating devices are properly vented and maintained. Know the symptoms of CO poisoning. Finally, do detect potentially deadly conditions, install and maintain CO alarms in your home in accordance with Minnesota’s CO alarm law.

1. Properly vent and maintain fuel-burning appliances.

Homes with fuel-burning appliances such as gas furnaces, water heaters, ovens, and fireplaces or homes with attached garage are more likely to have CO problems than those homes not using these appliances. You should have your fuel-burning appliances checked by a qualified heating contractor every year to look for possible problems.

The following signs may indicate a CO problem:

  • Streaks of soot around fuel-burning appliances;
  • Absence of an upward draft in your chimney;
  • Excess moisture found on windows, walls, or other cold surfaces;
  • Excessive rusting on flue pipes, other pipe connections, or appliance jacks;
  • Orange or yellow flames (should be blue) in your combustion appliances;
  • Smoky smells-don’t assume your fire alarm works;
  • Fallen soot in the fireplace;
  • Small amount of water leaking from the base of the chimney vent, or flue pipe;
  • Damaged or discolored bricks at the top of your chimney; and
  • Rust on the portion of the vent pipe visible from the outside.

Never use a barbecue grill or portable gas generator indoors. Never heat your home using an oven designed for cooking.

2. Know the symptoms of CO poisoning.

The health effects of breathing in CO depend on the concentration of CO in the air, the duration of exposure, and the health status of the exposed person. For most people, the first signs of exposure to low concentrations of CO include mild headache and breathlessness with moderate exercise. People with heart disease are more likely to be affected by CO, even at low concentrations. Continued exposure can lead to flu-like symptoms including more severe headaches, dizziness, tiredness, and nausea that may progress to confusion, irritability, and impaired judgment, memory and coordination. CO is called the "silent killer" because if the early signs are ignored, a person may lose consciousness and be unable to escape to safety. Under certain conditions, lethal concentrations of CO have occurred within 10 minutes in the confines of a closed garage with a car engine running inside or when a portable generator is used in or near a house.
 

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How can I tell the difference between CO poisoning and the flu?

It could be CO poisoning if:

  • You feel better when you are away from your home;
  • Several people in the home gets sick at the same time (the flu is usually passed from person to person);
  • The family members who are most affected spend the most time in the home;
  • Symptoms occur or get worse shortly after turning on a fuel-burning device (furnace, oven, fireplace) or running a vehicle in attached garage;
  • Indoor pets also appear ill (pets may experience symptoms first);
  • You don’t have a fever or generalized aching and swollen lymph nodes typical with a cold or virus or flu; or
  • Symptoms appear at the same time as signs of inappropriate ventilation, maintenance, or operation of fuel-burning devices.

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3. Install and maintain CO alarms in your home.

Minnesota State Law requires that homes have at least one operational CO alarm within 10 feet of every room legally used for sleeping (see Minnesota Statute, 299F.50). All CO alarms should be certified by a nationally recognized testing laboratory to conform to the latest Underwriters Laboratory (UL) Standards. Follow the manufacturer’s instructions for placement of your CO alarm and also note the suggested replacement date. For additional information on CO alarms, call 651-201-7200 or visit www.fire.state.mn.us

Can I experience CO poisoning from tobacco smoke?

Tobacco smoke, also known as "environmental tobacco smoke," contains CO in addition to many other hazardous chemicals and particles. Concentrations of CO in second hand smoke are too low to cause immediate poisoning, but breathing second-hand smoke for a long time can adversely affect the health of those exposed to it.

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Are some people at greater risk of CO poisoning than others?

Yes, some people are at greater risk of CO poisoning. People at greater risk include individuals with:

  • respiratory conditions (such as asthma and emphysema);
  • cardiovascular disease;
  • anemia (such as sickle cell anemia); and
  • individuals engaging in strenuous physical activity;
  • the elderly, children and fetuses.

Remember, anyone can become sick and die from CO poisoning when exposed to very high CO levels.

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Can CO be a problem during the summer?

Yes. Although CO problems are more common during the heating season, vehicles including boats and some other fuel burning devices such as non-electric heaters for camping and fishing are used year-round and can be sources of CO during recreational activities.

CO poisoning has resulted from the use of fuel burning devices during power outages. Portable generators are capable of producing carbon monoxide levels that are several hundred times the levels emitted by a modern car exhaust and can kill people in a very short time. 2

As recommended by CDC, portable generators should be placed at a minimum of 25 feet away from and down wind of a house. Be sure that there are no vents or openings, including window air conditioners, near the generator that would allow exhaust to enter into your home.

2 U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)

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Where else could I experience CO poisoning?

Anytime you are near a fuel-burning device, there is a risk of CO exposure. Because vehicles are a common source of CO problems, MDH recommends that you not run or idle your vehicle in an attached garage. Instead, back your vehicle out right away. MDH also recommends that you check that your vehicle’s exhaust pipe is not blocked, for example, by snow during the winter.

Fatalities due to CO inhalation have also occurred from boat motors. Be sure to follow manufacturer’s guidelines and warn children about potential dangers near parts of the boat where exhaust concentrations could be high.

Dangerous concentrations of CO may also be produced by burning fossil-fuel appliances, such gas stoves or charcoal grills in any enclosed space including campers, tents, and ice fishing houses.

Finally, inhalation of paint removers containing methylene chloride can also result in carbon monoxide poisoning. Be sure to follow directions and use products containing methylene chloride and other chemicals in well-ventilated areas.

Identifying the reason behind the week the HSEM press release identified the issues:

Over the last 10 years, more than 50 people drowned after falling through thin ice, and 65 percent of ice drownings were vehicle related. Last winter, 22 people died in snowmobile accidents; half those fatal events involved alcohol or drug use. And during 2005–2007 in Minnesota, officers reported snow or icy road conditions in nearly 41,000 crashes that resulted in 159 deaths and 13,000 injuries. Clearly, people are being “surprised” by weather conditions."

The plan is, no matter how harsh the winter, to make sure everyone is safe and alive at the end of it.

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