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At 5:30 a.m. on J Une14, 2015, residents of Tawiran alerted the fire department that a food processing plant was on fi re. Two workers were found collapsed on the floor. At the hospital where they were taken, it was confirmed that one of them died due to carbon monoxide poisoning and the other one was slightly affected. At the site of the accident, a gas stove was used in a room where all windows were closed and a ventilation system was stopped. Under the circumstances, the cause of the accident is believed to be the room filled with exhaust containing carbon monoxide from a leak in the gas stove.

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NCCarbon MonoxideIncidents

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger2006

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger20062005

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger200620052004

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger2006200520042003

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger20062005200420032002

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger200620052004200320022001

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger2006200520042003200220012000

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger2006200520042003200220012000

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger2006200520042003200220012000 2006

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger2006200520042003200220012000 2006October 25, 2006 - Officer reported that occupant's CO detector went off last night. He woke up and took out the batteries and went back to bed. We responded today based upon a call from a medical facility who was treating a patient for CO exposure. Engine 21 responded and their monitoring revealed a peak CO reading of 288 PPM. The source of CO was tracked to a malfunctioning heating unit.

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger2006200520042003200220012000 2006October 25, 2006 - Officer reported that occupant's CO detector went off last night. He woke up and took out the batteries and went back to bed. We responded today based upon a call from a medical facility who was treating a patient for CO exposure. Engine 21 responded and their monitoring revealed a peak CO reading of 288 PPM. The source of CO was tracked to a malfunctioning heating unit.October 24, 2006 - Occupant reported CO alarm activation and had reading of about 50ppm in his unit. Investigation uncovered that an occupant of nearby apartment had placed charcoal grill inside his apartment. Readings in this unit were approximately 400ppm. Subject treated by EMS and transported to hospital.

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger2006200520042003200220012000 2006October 25, 2006 - Officer reported that occupant's CO detector went off last night. He woke up and took out the batteries and went back to bed. We responded today based upon a call from a medical facility who was treating a patient for CO exposure. Engine 21 responded and their monitoring revealed a peak CO reading of 288 PPM. The source of CO was tracked to a malfunctioning heating unit.October 24, 2006 - Occupant reported CO alarm activation and had reading of about 50ppm in his unit. Investigation uncovered that an occupant of nearby apartment had placed charcoal grill inside his apartment. Readings in this unit were approximately 400ppm. Subject treated by EMS and transported to hospital.July 16, 2006 - CFD responded to a CO incident at a single family dwelling. CO was detected in excess of 500 ppm. Source was determined to be a charcoal grill left in a closed attached garage.

NCCarbon MonoxideIncidentsCarbon Monoxide Poisoning Incidents CO Danger2006200520042003200220012000 2006October 25, 2006 - Officer reported that occupant's CO detector went off last night. He woke up and took out the batteries and went back to bed. We responded today based upon a call from a medical facility who was treating a patient for CO exposure. Engine 21 responded and their monitoring revealed a peak CO reading of 288 PPM. The source of CO was tracked to a malfunctioning heating unit.October 24, 2006 - Occupant reported CO alarm activation and had reading of about 50ppm in his unit. Investigation uncovered that an occupant of nearby apartment had placed charcoal grill inside his apartment. Readings in this unit were approximately 400ppm. Subject treated by EMS and transported to hospital.July 16, 2006 - CFD responded to a CO incident at a single family dwelling. CO was detected in excess of 500 ppm. Source was determined to be a charcoal grill left in a closed attached garage.July 9, 2006 - CFD responded to CO alarm call at an apartment building with reported symptoms of CO poisoning. CO readings of up to 1800ppm were taken and the entire building was evacuated. Firefighters id