Genesee County Health Department
Better Life Through Better Health
Your Home and Carbon
Monoxide
A silent killer, Carbon monoxide (CO) is
a tasteless, colorless, odorless gas. It is the leading cause of
accidental poisoning deaths in the home. CO is produced whenever any
fossil fuel, such as gas, oil, kerosene, wood, or charcoal, is burned.
It produces a blue flame. The gas will build to dangerous levels in
unvented and enclosed areas.
Carbon monoxide is a hazard when devices
such as automobiles, coal stoves, furnaces, hot water heaters and gas
appliances that do not get enough air are not working properly or are
used incorrectly. Leaking chimneys, unvented space heaters, and
fireplaces present other hazards.
The symptoms of CO poisoning vary
depending on the amount of gas inhaled. Low levels can cause fatigue and
chest pain. Higher levels cause impaired vision, poor coordination,
headaches, dizziness and confusion, nausea and flu-like symptoms, which
clear up after leaving the enclosed area. CO is fatal at very high
levels. Victims need immediate access to fresh air. More severe cases
require CPR and oxygen. Call 911.
To prevent CO poisoning:
- DO obtain and use a CO detector
meter.
- DO read and follow instructions that
accompany any fuel-burning device. Use the proper fuel.
- DO have fuel-burning appliances and
heating systems (furnaces, flues, and chimneys) inspected by a
trained professional each year. Replace unvented space heaters with
those that are.
- DO open the fireplace flue before
lighting.
- DON’T use a gas oven to heat your
home. Install an exhaust fan over a gas stove.
- DON’T idle a car in an attached
garage or with the door closed.
For more information, call the Genesee
County Health Department at (810) 257-3612.
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