The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) has released its latest findings on fire losses in the U.S., show ing a decrease in fire deaths .

The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) has released its latest findings on fire losses in the U.S., which show that fire deaths (3,570) have decreased by 11% from 1998. The results confirm a positive trend of declining fire deaths.

About 80% of all fire deaths continue to occur in the home, and 70% of all structure fires continue to occur in homes.

While much of the data released was encouraging, the overall number of reported fires in the country rose by 4% to 1,823,000.

The release also listed some statistics: every 17 seconds, a fire department responds to a fire somewhere in this country; every 85 seconds, there is a home fire; and there is a civilian fire injury every 24 minutes.

Other Findings

Vehicle fires dropped by 3% last year to 368,500. The Northeast had the highest regional rate of fire injuries per million population, while the West had the lowest.

There was a significant increase in property damage as a result of fire-up 16% from the previous year to an estimated direct cost of $10,024,000,000. The report also indicates a decrease of 5% in fires known to have been deliberately set or suspected of being set.

The full report will be published later this year in NFPA Journal and will address several strategies that have already helped reduce the overall U.S. fire death toll, as well as offer the potential for future declines.