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Prevalence of working smoke alarms in local authority inner city housing: randomised controlled trial

BMJ 2002; 325 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.325.7371.998 (Published 02 November 2002) Cite this as: BMJ 2002;325:998
  1. Diane Rowland, research fellowa,
  2. Carolyn DiGuiseppi, associate professorb,
  3. Ian Roberts, professor of epidemiology and public health (Ian.Roberts{at}LSHTM.ac.uk)a,
  4. Katherine Curtis, research officerc,
  5. Helen Roberts, professor of child healthc,
  6. Laura Ginnelly, research fellowd,
  7. Mark Sculpher, professor of health economicsd,
  8. Angela Wade, senior lecturer in medical statisticse
  1. a Public Health Intervention Research Unit, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London WC1B 3DP
  2. b Department of Preventive Medicine and Biometrics, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO 80262, USA
  3. c Institute of Health Sciences, City University, London EC1A 7QN
  4. d Centre for Health Economics, University of York, York YO10 5DD
  5. e Centre for Paediatric Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute of Child Health, London WC1N 3JH
  1. Correspondence to: I Roberts
  • Accepted 15 August 2002

Abstract

Objectives: To identify which type of smoke alarm is most likely to remain working in local authority inner city housing, and to identify an alarm tolerated in households with smokers.

Design: Randomised controlled trial.

Setting:Two local authority housing estates in inner London.

Participants: 2145 households.

Intervention: Installation of one of five types of smoke alarm (ionisation sensor with a zinc battery; ionisation sensor with a zinc battery and pause button; ionisation sensor with a lithium battery and pause button; optical sensor with a lithium battery; or optical sensor with a zinc battery).

Main outcome measure: Percentage of homes with any working alarm and percentage in which the alarm installed for this study was working after 15 months.

Results: 54.4% (1166/2145) of all households and 45.9% (465/1012) of households occupied by smokers had a working smoke alarm. Ionisation sensor, lithium battery, and there being a smoker in the household were independently associated with whether an alarm was working (adjusted odds ratios 2.24 (95% confidence interval 1.75 to 2.87), 2.20 (1.77 to 2.75), and 0.62 (0.52 to 0.74)). The most common reasons for non-function were missing battery (19%), missing alarm (17%), and battery disconnected (4%).

Conclusions: Nearly half of the alarms installed were not working when tested 15 months later. Type of alarm and power source are important determinants of whether a household had a working alarm.

What is already known on this topic

What is already known on this topic Functioning smoke alarms can reduce the risk of death in the event of a house fire

Many local authorities install smoke alarms in their properties

Several different types of smoke alarm are available

What this study adds

What this study adds Only half of the smoke alarms installed in local authority housing were still working 15 months later

Ionising smoke alarms with long life lithium batteries were most likely to remain functioning

Installing smoke alarms may not be an effective use of resources

Introduction

Every year about 500 people die and 15 000 people are injured in house fires in England and Wales.1 Children and elderly people are at greatest risk, and risk is strongly associated with socioeconomic group.2 Smoke alarms can reduce the risk of death in a fire.3 In 1999, 81% of British households reported having an alarm4; in two deprived inner London boroughs, however, only 16% of local authority homes had working smoke alarms.5 Householders may remove or disconnect batteries because of warnings that batteries are low or to avoid false alarms from cooking or tobacco smoke.6 Because smoking is a strong risk factor for death from fire, increasing the prevalence of working alarms in households with smokers is particularly important.7

Smoke alarms differ by sensor type (ionisation or optical) and power source (mains or battery operated). Because ionisation sensors are sensitive to small smoke particles—for example, from cigarettes or cooking—false alarms are common; some ionisation alarms have a pause button which enables the alarm to be temporarily silenced.8 Alarms using optical sensors, which are more expensive, are less sensitive to small smoke particles and may cause fewer nuisance alarms.

Most battery operated alarms use zinc or alkaline batteries costing about £2 ($3; €3) and lasting about a year. Lithium batteries, lasting up to 10 years and costing £7, are available.

No studies have identified which type of alarm is most likely to remain working the longest in local authority households. To measure how the different types of alarms and power sources affect the prevalence of working alarms we carried out a randomised controlled trial. Qualitative work explored the perspectives of users and process issues.

Methods

We recruited participants from a local authority housing estate in the London Borough of Camden between November 1999 and August 2000. We sent an introductory letter inviting households to participate which we followed up with a visit. We asked residents fluent in relevant languages to encourage the substantial (23%) non-English speaking population to participate. Participants gave written consent to be randomly allocated one of five types of smoke alarm, to have the alarm installed, and to have an interview and inspection 15 months later.

We collected information about tenure, the number of adult occupiers, the number of smokers, whether a working alarm was already present, and whether the kitchen was open plan for each property. Office staff entered participants' data into the MINIM programme, which randomly allocated alarm types using minimisation to achieve a balance regarding these five factors.9

Intervention

The MINIM programme randomised participants to alarms containing (a) an ionisation sensor and a zinc battery; (b) an ionisation sensor, a zinc battery, and a pause button; (c) an ionisation sensor, a lithium battery, and a pause button; (d) an optical sensor and a lithium battery; (e) an optical sensor and a zinc battery. We allocated alarms in the ratio 7:7:3:3:4 for these categories (figure). Alarms were installed following manufacturer's guidelines.

We gave participants written and verbal instructions on maintenance including monthly testing, annual vacuuming, and, as appropriate, use of the pause button and annual battery replacement. Reminders to change the battery were sent to participants with alarms powered by zinc batteries one year after installation.

Assessment and analysis of outcome

At follow up, 15 months after installation, we visited each household unannounced and sought permission to inspect and test the alarm using a standardised smoke test.10 If the alarm failed we checked if the battery was present, connected, and working. Replacement batteries were offered to all recipients of alarms powered by zinc batteries. Because batteries, sensors, and casings were not identical, the trained project officers were not blinded. If access to the property was not gained, we assumed alarms were not working.

The sample size and allocation ratio that we chose gave at least an 80% chance of showing a 10% difference in the prevalence of working alarms at the 5% significance level. We used logistic regression to calculate the effects on the probability that the allocated alarm was working. We also investigated whether the prevalence of working alarms after 15 months was related to whether the occupiers were smokers or had open plan kitchens. Analyses were based on original alarm allocation. The Institute of Child Health Research Ethics Committee approved the design of the study.

Results

Of 4549 potentially eligible households, 3268 (71.8%) were contacted, of which 2145 (65.6%) agreed to participate. The figure shows the flow of participants through the trial. Table 1 gives baseline characteristics.

Figure1

Flow of households through the trial

Table 1

Characteristics of households on local authority estates in London at baseline. Values are numbers (percentages)

View this table:

Of the 2145 randomised households, 2039 (95.1) were assessed, and 2004 (93.4) had a smoke alarms installed. A total of 1166 (54.4%) had a working alarm. The alarm fitted for this study was working in 1097 (51.1%) households. Of 1012 households with at least one smoker, 465 (45.9%) had working alarms; of 506 households with open plan kitchens, 253 (50.0%) had working alarms.

The households given alarms with an ionisation sensor, lithium batteries, and a pause button were the most likely to have a working alarm (184/267; 69%) and to have a working study alarm (175; 66%) (table 2). The households given optical alarms with a zinc battery were least likely to have any working alarm (148/359; 41%) or a working study alarm (131/359; 36%).

Smoke alarms were less likely to be working in households with at least one smoker, irrespective of the type of alarm. The percentage of households with at least one smoker with any working alarm was greatest for alarms with ionisation sensors, lithium batteries, and pause buttons (127; 59%) and lowest for alarms with optical sensors and zinc batteries (53; 31%). In households with at least one smoker, the proportion of alarms working was lower for optical alarms (38%) than for ionising alarms (48%). The proportion of households with a working alarm was lower in properties with open plan kitchens (253/506; 50.0%) compared with households with enclosed kitchens (913/1639; 55.7%).

Alarms with an ionisation sensor (odds ratios 1.45; 95% confidence interval 1.20 to 1.74) or a lithium battery (1.67; 1.36 to 2.03) were more likely than not to be working.

Table 2

Results of alarm function 15 months post-installation

View this table:

Having a pause button was not related to the chance of an alarm working (1.08; 0.91 to 1.29). The alarm was significantly less likely to be working in households with at least one smoker (0.63; 0.53 to 0.75). Having an enclosed kitchen was not associated with greater prevalence of working alarms (1.12; 0.92 to 1.37).

In a multivariate model, ionisation sensor, lithium battery, and smoking were all independently associated with whether alarms worked (adjusted odds ratios 2.24 (1.75 to 2.87), 2.20 (1.77 to 2.75), and 0.62 (0.52 to 0.74), respectively). Presence of a pause button had a significant negative effect once these factors were taken into account (0.68; 0.55 to 0.85). There were no significant interactions.

The most common reasons for alarms not working among all 2145 households were missing alarm (365; 17.0%), missing battery (417; 19.4%), and disconnected battery (79; 3.7%). In smoking households the pattern was similar. Among alarms powered by zinc batteries, low battery warning signals and reported changing of the battery were more common when alarms had optical sensors (67/359 (19%) v 93/359 (26%)) and ionisation sensors and pause buttons (136/628 (21.7) v156/628 (24.8%)) than other alarms with ionisation sensors (50/625 (8.0%) v 81/625 (13.0%)).

Discussion

Nearly half of the smoke alarms installed in local authority housing were not working 15 months after installation; 40% were missing or had been disabled by tenants. Some types of alarm were more likely to be working than others; alarms using an ionisation sensor and a 10 year lithium battery were most likely to remain working (69%).

Strengths and weaknesses

Trial allocation was well concealed, potential known confounders were balanced in randomisation, an intention to treat analysis was carried out, and outcome was assessed for 95% of randomised participants. Outcome assessment could not be blinded to alarm type and we cannot exclude the possibility of assessor bias.11 In initial discussions with fire safety policy makers, we were advised that a 10% increase in the prevalence of working alarms would have important implications: we accounted for this in determining the trial size. Because the number of participants recruited and followed up was greater than anticipated, the trial had the power to detect differences of this magnitude. Conversely, the proportion of potentially eligible households taking part (47%) was less than expected, and this may impact on the extent to which the results can be generalised. We cannot predict the proportion of alarms working in households that were not contacted, although it is reasonable to predict that a lithium battery smoke alarm would be most effective. We also anticipate that many tenants who refused participation in the trial would also refuse free installation of a smoke alarm if it was offered as part of a community fire prevention programme.

Relation to other studies

A systematic review of interventions to promote the ownership and working of residential smoke alarms identified 26 completed trials of which 13 were randomised.12 None examined the effect of smoke alarm sensor and power source on function. A similar randomised trial of the effect of alarm type on function is currently under way in the United States (in Seattle). This will provide insight into the extent to which the results of our trial can be generalised to other settings.

What the results might mean

A randomised trial of giving smoke alarms away showed that many tenants failed to install the alarms.13 The government currently advises local authorities to install battery powered smoke alarms in their properties.14 Our results support using alarms with ionisation sensors powered by lithium batteries. Alarms with optical sensors and pause buttons for reducing nuisance alarm problems are not more effective despite their theoretical advantages (and seem to need extra battery power).

It is a concern that even alarms with ionisation sensors powered by lithium batteries were not working after 15 months in as many as 30% of households (40% of households occupied by smokers). Installing smoke alarms may not be the best use of the limited resources of local authorities; analyses of the cost effectiveness of such programmes are needed.

Smoke alarms that are less sensitive to cooking and cigarette smoke but still able to give early warning of a house fire merit investigation. Alternatively, sprinkler systems may be a more effective way to reduce the risk of injury due to fire.15

Acknowledgments

We thank the tenants of Camden's Regent's Park Estate and Somers Town Estate. We contacted all participating households to inform them of the trial results. We also thank Camden and Islington Health Authority, particularly Suzanne Slater and Maggie Barker, and Camden Housing Department.

Contributors: All authors participated in study conception and design, revised the manuscript critically for intellectual content, and approved the final version. DR, CD, IR, and AW analysed and interpreted results. DR oversaw programme implementation and data collection, and drafted the manuscript. Charlotte Seirberg revisited households and inspected alarms at follow up. IR is guarantor.

Footnotes

  • Editorial by Pless

  • Funding Medical Research Council (ISRCTN 47572799). Camden and Islington Health Action Zone, the West Euston Partnership, and the Joan Dawkins Fund paid for the smoke alarms and their installation.

  • Competing interests None declared.

References