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  1. Home
  2. Kids Health Hub
  3. Safety and Injury Prevention
  4. Burns and Fire Safety For Kids

Burns and fire safety

Knowing what to do in the event of a fire in the home and understanding how to treat burns and scalds.

Young girl on a ride on bike near the edge of a backyard pool. The girl reaches dangerously with her arm towards the water and is at risk of falling in.
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Burns and fire safety for kids

Fire safety is everyone's responsibility. 

It is important that all members of the family 

  • take steps to reduce the risk of fires in the home 
  • know how to respond in the event of a fire.

The most common causes of home fires are: 

  • leaving cooking unattended 
  • electrical appliances 
  • heaters 
  • candles and cigarettes.

Explore topics

First aid for burns

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Prevent fires in the home

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Teaching your child about fire safety

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Burns and scalds

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Safety and injury prevention
  • Home safety
    • Poisons safety
    • Baby proofing the house
    • Balconies, windows and railing safety
    • Staying safe around pets
    • Choosing safe toys
    • Carbon monoxide poisoning
  • Burns and fire safety
    • Prevent fires in the home
    • Teaching your child
    • Burns and scalds
    • First aid
  • Water safety
    • Pool safety
    • Swimming and flotation aids (floaties)
    • Other outdoor sources of water
    • Bath time
    • Bath time for newborns
    • Summer safety
  • Hot weather and sun
    • Sun safety
    • Staying sun safe at the snow
    • Managing sunburn
    • Heat exhaustion and heatstroke
  • Outdoor safety
    • Playgrounds and equipment safety
    • Trampoline safety
    • Farm and recreational vehicles
    • Bites and stings
    • Travel safety
    • Farm injuries
    • Hay fever
  • Safety around cars
    • Children in hot cars
    • Child car seats and restraint fitting
    • Driveways and reversing cars
    • Motor vehicle accidents
    • Road rules and active transport
  • Medication safety
    • Prescription medication
    • Safe storage of medication
    • Administering medications
    • Medication poisoning
    • Serious allergic reactions (anaphylaxis) and EpiPens
    • Understanding diabetes
    • Monitoring blood glucose levels (BGLs)
    • Asthma medication usage
  • Protecting your child
    • Child protection and safe people in the community
    • Smacking a child
    • Online safety
    • Evaluating health information online
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Last updated Tuesday 10 February 2026

Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network acknowledges that our facilities are built on the lands of the Bidjigal, Cammeraygal, Burramattagal, Cabrogal, Wangal, and Woddi Woddi. Our services extend across the lands now known as New South Wales. 

Aboriginal people believe these lands hold the ancestral spirits of those who have come and gone before them.

We acknowledge this is, was, and always will be, Aboriginal land.


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