| Answer | % Correct | |
|---|---|---|
| You have to know where you are to escape | Orient yourself quickly | 90%
|
| Smoke inhalation kills people in building fires more than the actual fire | Get down low to avoid smoke | 40%
|
| Don't want to lacerate yourself on the way out. Bleeding to death on the driveway would suck | Break window and clear broken glass | 30%
|
| How else are you going to get out? | Locate nearest exit point (the window) | 30%
|
| This helps lessen the amount of smoke that enters the room | Wet a blanket with a nightstand water bottle and use it to block the doorframe | 25%
|
| Ensure you aren't about to leap into dangerous debris or fire | Scope out your landing area outside before jumping and ensure a clear path | 20%
|
| Softer landing area | If not the car, aim for the lawn | 15%
|
| The safest way to land a jump from anything higher than a couple feet | Attempt your best roll when you land | 10%
|
| Explosion and structural collapse put you and others at risk if you remain nearby | Get at least 30 yards away from the house | 10%
|
| This lowers the overall height you're falling. Plus, the roof of a car is a crumple zone that could lessen injury | Jump onto the roof of the car in the driveway to lessen the impact | 10%
|
| You likely breathed in a lot of smoke and probably sustained an injury jumping out the window | When they arrive, have EMS check and treat you | 10%
|