
Service Experts Heating and Air Conditioning surveyed 1,000 homeowners in the U.S. and Canada on their familiarity of carbon monoxide (CO). According to The Centers for Disease Control, carbon monoxide poisoning is a leading cause of unintentional poisoning deaths – causing about 15,000 emergency room visits and almost 500 deaths yearly in the United States1. There are startling gaps in what homeowners do and don’t know about remaining safe.
Quite a few common household appliances release carbon monoxide
Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless gas that can build to harmful levels in your home when fuel-burning devices are not properly vented, operated or maintained. Breathing in CO can cause carbon monoxide poisoning which attacks the nervous system, heart and could be fatal. It’s crucial to have your home tested for carbon monoxide regularly to help ensure safe air quality.
Common sources of CO in homes include certain:
- Furnaces
- Stoves
- Space heaters
- Fireplaces
- Water heaters
- Clothes dryers
What do you know about CO?
Our survey results show the alarming lack of information homeowners have about the dangers of carbon monoxide:
- 66% don’t know if they would know the symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning (headache, nausea, dizziness, or confusion).
- 94% of homeowners know that the furnace can release deadly carbon monoxide gas, but more than half (54%) don’t get an annual furnace tune-up, a simple step that can help ensure correct furnace operation and venting.
- 54% don’t know the ideal place in the home to install a carbon monoxide detector (the Consumer Product Safety Commission recommends a detector outside of each separate sleeping area).
- More than half of homeowners (54%) don’t know that the clothes dryer may be a source of carbon monoxide; 25% don’t know that that fireplace also can be a source. Other likely sources include gas water heaters, gas ranges, charcoal grills, gas space heaters and wood burning stoves.
- Over one third of homeowners (34%) don’t have or are not sure if they have a carbon monoxide detector in their home; 41% say they never change their carbon monoxide detector, or they aren’t sure how often it is replaced.
Determine your home’s CO risk
With a routine home comfort analysis, Barlow Service Experts in the Wasatch Front region could help keep your family safe this winter. Visit ServiceExperts.com/CO-Safety, call 801-436-8985 or use our online scheduler to set up an analysis of CO and other hazardous indoor air pollutant levels.
1http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5650a1.htm