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Your escape plan needs to include a way for an adult to rescue younger children. Although it is quite possible that a three or four-year-old can rescue themselves, we would recommend that you plan to have an adult rescue all children younger than five. Teach them how to get out on their own, but plan so that your escape route swings by the child's room and then exit from there. If you have more than one young child, assign each adult a child to rescue. Just like your regular escape route, you should find two ways to get to that child in case one is blocked. If this means exiting the house and rescuing them from the outside, decide ahead of time how you would access their bedroom window, get it open, etc. Children who might have been rescued frequently perish because four or five minutes go by as adults fumble around outside the house trying to decide how to get to them. Planning for these variables ahead of time could mean the difference between life or death. Consider mounting a safety ladder outside you child's bedroom window or keeping something nearby that can be accessed in an emergency. One way or another, have a plan for getting to your child's bedroom in the event of a house fire.
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