Researchers focused on fire safety features listed among the
amenities in almost 121,000 rental listings available through Airbnb
in 16 cities including Boston, Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, New
Orleans, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington, D.C.
Smoke detectors were listed among the amenities in more than 96,000
venues overall, representing 80 percent, the study found. But just
58 percent of rooms and homes in the study had carbon monoxide
detectors, only 42 percent had fire extinguishers and a mere 36
percent had first aid kits.
"This is really surprising because most fire deaths and carbon
monoxide poisonings happen in residential housing," study co-author
Vanya Jones of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
in Baltimore said by email.
There were more than 1.3 million fires resulting in over 2,500
deaths and $14 billion in property damage in the U.S. in 2015 alone,
the researchers note in Injury Prevention.
While hotels in the U.S. are required to provide fire safety
features like maps to exits, fire doors, fire extinguishers,
sprinklers and smoke detectors, the same regulations don't apply to
short-term accommodations rented in private residences, they write.
Airbnb has more than 4 million venues for rent worldwide, in 65,000
cities and 191 countries, according to the study authors. This
includes approximately 600,000 listings in the U.S.
Airbnb hosts can list many features as amenities available with
their listings, including parking, wi-fi, laundry or a pool, as well
as safety features like fire extinguishers and carbon monoxide
detectors.
Across all the cities in the study, the availability of smoke
detectors ranged from a low of 74 percent of listings in Austin,
Texas, to a high of 90 percent of venues in Nashville, Tennessee.
About 58 percent of venues listed carbon monoxide monitors, with a
range from 37 percent in Austin to 74 percent in Denver.
Fire extinguishers were less common, and were listed in only 29
percent of rentals in New York City. Portland, Oregon, was the only
city where more than half of the venues had first aid kits.
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The relatively high rates of smoke detectors in Nashville and
Portland might be explained by both cities requiring prospective
hosts to register a venue and obtain a permit, the study team
writes.
To assess fire safety features, researchers examined data collected
by the website InsideAirbnb.com between October 2015 and December
2016. InsideAirbnb.com is an independent website that compiles
publicly available information about Airbnb listings posted by
Airbnb hosts.
The data cover a broad period and capture a snapshot of amenities
reported by hosts that might not represent what's actually available
in venues nationwide, the authors note. Some hosts might not list
these features even when they have them available, especially if
they live in apartment or condo buildings that are responsible for
providing some of these amenities, the researchers also point out.
In February 2018, Airbnb introduced a new rental program with
enhanced features and amenities, Airbnb Plus, which only includes
listings with smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, Nick Shapiro,
global head of trust and risk management for Airbnb, said in an
emailed statement.
"Every listing on Airbnb clearly states the specific safety
amenities it has, including smoke and carbon monoxide detectors,
fire extinguishers, and first aid kits, so guests can look first and
then decide whether that home, tree-house, yurt, or igloo is the one
they want to book or not," Shapiro said.
"Whether a home is listed on Airbnb or not, all homes and hotel
rooms should have smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, fire
extinguishers and first aid kits," Shapiro added. "At Airbnb we give
out free smoke and carbon monoxide detectors to each and every host
who wants one; we have been doing this for the last three years."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/1jYt7f0 Injury Prevention, online May 7,
2018.
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