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Welcome to TheSafetyNews.com!
Your one stop resource for home safety, information about child safety tips, workplace
safety, student safety, senior safety, and travel safety guide.
TheSafetyNews.com offers articles and tips on all topics related to safety, from
terrorism to Internet privacy to domestic violence. Take a moment to read up on
any safety issues you are concerned about, or learn about new threats to your safety
you haven't considered yet.
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Fire Prevention Tips for your Home Safety
According to Home Safety Council research shows that 97 percent of American
homes have at least one smoke alarm, but one may be enough. Do you have enough smoke
alarms in your home? Are they correctly installed? Early warning is essential for
every fire escape plan. Read more
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Child Safety Tips
Nothing is more precious than the safety of your children. At TSN, we are committed
to providing you with everything you need to keep your children safe from the dangers
of theft, fire, carbon monoxide and a host of other threats. Read more |
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Office Safety
Electrical accidents in an office usually occur as a result of faulty
or defective equipment, unsafe installation, or misuse of equipment.
Read more |
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Student Safety
Students own more expensive consumer goods per head than the rest of
the population. It is no surprise then that 1 in 3 students becomes the victim of
a crime each year. Added to that fact, young people (aged 16 to 24 year old) are
around three times more likely to be victims of burglary than people in other age
groups, which makes students all the more vulnerable. Read
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Crime Prevention Tips for Seniors
Crime and the fear of crime create special problems for the elderly.
Crime prevention is everyone's responsibility, not just a job for law enforcement.
Seniors can learn how to protect themselves from crime by following these simple,
common sense suggestions. Share these tips with your neighbors and friends, to make
it tough for criminals to work in your neighborhood. Read
more
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AP - Some advanced lung cancer patients already treated with chemotherapy might be able to skip some of the bad side effects of another series of chemo by taking a pill instead, a study suggests. An international study showed patients on Iressa, an expensive, newer targeted treatment, survived about as long as those on another course of chemotherapy.
AP - Two years after the government urged making HIV tests as common as cholesterol checks, there are small gains but still one in five people infected with the AIDS virus doesn't know it, scientists said Thursday.
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