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Alberta doctors warn against leaving hand sanitizer in hot cars due to fire risk

Click to play video: 'Alberta distilleries make hand sanitizer amid COVID-19 pandemic'
Alberta distilleries make hand sanitizer amid COVID-19 pandemic
WATCH ABOVE: The COVID-19 crisis has upended business plans for countless companies, forcing them to adapt and to innovate. As Fletcher Kent explains, some distilleries are going from spirits to sanitizers. – Mar 19, 2020

Doctors at Alberta Health Services say people using hand sanitizer when they are out shouldn’t leave it in their cars for too long because it could lead to a fire.

The advice comes in a daily COVID-19 newsletter distributed to physicians, volunteers and staff by AHS president Dr. Verna Yui and senior medical health officer Dr. Laura McDougall.

They said handwashing with soap and warm water is still the best way to prevent the spread of COVID-19, but they noted that’s not always practical when outside the home or in a workplace.

“As such, many people are using hand sanitizer products as an alternative to hand-washing, when they are out and about,” Yui and McDougall wrote in Thursday’s newsletter.

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With hand sanitizer being in short supply, many breweries, distilleries and community-based companies have started making their own with high alcohol content, which they said should be between 60 and 90 per cent.

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Yui and McDougall said not to store any hand sanitizer in your car for long periods of time.

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“With extended exposure to high temperatures, the alcohol in the hand sanitizer will eventually evaporate, causing it to lose its efficacy,” they wrote. “Additionally, there is a potential fire risk to storing hand sanitizer in your car.

“In extreme heat, it can ignite due to its high alcohol content.”

A spokesman with AHS said he doesn’t know of any injuries due to hand sanitizer fires in Alberta, noting it’s just a general warning from the doctors.

There have, however, been cases cited in medical journals — including one from 2011 of a health-care worker who was burned when she lit a cigarette after using hand sanitizer.

The National Fire Protection Association in the United States also issued a warning in mid-April about the possibility, although it noted there must be an ignition source for a fire to occur. It said spontaneous combustion is highly unlikely unless a vehicle were to reach extreme temperatures.

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The chief fire marshal in Lethbridge, a city in southern Alberta, added his voice to the warning Friday.

“While hand sanitizer is great resource to protect against the transmission of COVID-19, there is an increased fire risk,” wrote Heath Wright. “Alcohol-based hand sanitizers have a very low flashpoint (temperature at which its vapors ignite if given an ignition source) due to the percentage of alcohol required in these products.

He suggested hand sanitizers be stored in a cool, dry place.

Health officials in Alberta also recommend people not ingest hand sanitizer and keep it out of the reach of children.

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