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Household Chemical Emergencies
Nearly every household uses products containing hazardous materials or
chemicals.
These include, but are not
limited to:
- Cleaning products
- Automotive products
- Lawn and garden products
- Indoor pesticides
- Workshop/painting supplies
- Flammable products
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Although the risk of a chemical accident is slight, knowing how to handle
these products and how to react during an emergency can reduce the risk of
injury.
There are probably many hazardous materials throughout your
home. Take a tour of your home to see where these materials are located.
Once you have located a product, check the label and take the necessary
steps to ensure that you are using, storing, and disposing of the material
according to the manufacturer’s directions. It is critical to store
household chemicals in places where children cannot access them.
Remember that products such as aerosol cans of hair spray and deodorant,
nail polish and nail polish remover, toilet bowl cleaners, and furniture
polishes all fall into the category of hazardous materials.
Before a Household Chemical
Emergency
The following are guidelines for buying and storing hazardous household
chemicals safely:
- Buy only as much of a chemical as you
think you will use. Leftover material can be shared with neighbors or
donated to a business, charity, or government agency. For example, excess
pesticide could be offered to a greenhouse or garden center, and theater
groups often need surplus paint. Some communities have organized waste
exchanges where household hazardous chemicals and waste can be swapped or
given away.
- Keep products containing hazardous
materials in their original containers and never remove the labels unless
the container is corroding. Corroding containers should be repackaged and
clearly labeled.
- Never store hazardous products in food
containers.
- Never mix household hazardous chemicals or
waste with other products. Incompatibles, such as chlorine bleach
and ammonia, may react, ignite, or explode.
Take the following precautions to prevent
and respond to accidents:
- Follow the manufacturer’s instructors for
the proper use of the household chemical.
- Never smoke while using household
chemicals.
- Never use hair spray, cleaning solutions,
paint products, or pesticides near an open flame (e.g., pilot light,
lighted candle, fireplace, wood burning stove, etc.) Although you may not
be able to see or smell them, vapor particles in the air could catch fire
or explode.
- Clean up any chemical spill immediately.
Use rags to clean up the spill. Wear gloves and eye protection.
Allow the fumes in the rags to evaporate outdoors, then dispose of the
rags by wrapping them in a newspaper and placing them in a sealed plastic
bag in your trash can.
- Dispose of hazardous materials correctly.
Take household hazardous waste to a local collection program. Check with
your county or state environmental or solid waste agency to learn if there
is a household hazardous waste collection program in your area.
Learn to recognize the symptoms of toxic poisoning, which
are as follows:
- Difficulty breathing.
- Irritation of the eyes, skin, throat, or respiratory
tract.
- Changes in skin color.
- Headache or blurred vision.
- Dizziness.
- Clumsiness or lack of coordination.
- Cramps or diarrhea.
Be prepared to seek medical assistance:
- Post the number of the emergency medical services and the
poison control center by all telephones. In an emergency situation,
you may not have time to look up critical phone numbers. The
national poison control number is (800)222-1222.
During a Household Chemical
Emergency
If there is a danger of fire or explosion:
- Get out of the residence immediately. Do not waste
time collecting items or calling the fire department when you are in
danger. Call the fire department from outside (a cellular phone or a
neighbor’s phone) once you are safely away from danger.
- Stay upwind and away from the residence to avoid breathing
toxic fumes.
If someone has been exposed to a household chemical:
- Find any containers of the substance that are readily
available in order to provide requested information. Call emergency
medical services.
- Follow the emergency operator or dispatcher’s first aid
instructions carefully.
- The first aid advice found on containers may be out of
date or inappropriate.
- Do not give anything by mouth unless advised to do so by a
medical professional.
- Discard clothing that may have been contaminated. Some
chemicals may not wash out completely.
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