 I'm someone who used to be a business woman, a career woman, but more recently I'm much more just mum and grandma. I've been in a wheelchair for eight years, before that I was on crutches for a couple of years, but full time in the wheelchair for the last eight years. Knowing that 62% of people who die in a house fire have a disability is really alarming to me. Since I've been aware of the statistics, home fire safety has really gone up in my priorities. It's really important to me to be as safe as I can when I'm at home, especially at night when I'm in bed and I feel that I'm at most risk. Home fire safety is my responsibility. It's something I can ask for help with, but ultimately it's mine because I live in my home and I want to live in my home for as long as I can and I want it to be as safe as I can and although I can ask for help at the end of the day the buck stops with me. I think the new Prevent Detect Escape module will definitely help raise awareness for people who may not have necessarily considered themselves to be at risk. It might actually be an awakening to see that actually anybody can be at risk but if you have a mobility impairment or something else that makes you more at risk that you need to take extra protection. Things that I've put into place to help me and the other people who live in my home be safer. Things like having smoke alarms that work that I test regularly and also having a ramp. My concern would be that if I woke up in the middle of the night and the alarm was going off and I had to get out quickly and I could see there was a fire between me and the door that had the ramp that I would be panicking and I wouldn't be able to get out. So having more options to get out has been really reassuring for me. I'm able to sleep better at night knowing that if a smoke alarm wakes me up and it's at one end of the house I can get out of the other end of the house. I've got no intention of being a statistic so I'm trying to close in all my options and make it easier to get out.