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Finding into death of Nicholas Stephen Brown

Deceased

Nicholas Stephen Brown

Demographics

3y, male

Date of death

2014-02-07

Finding date

2016-08-04

Cause of death

carboxyhaemoglobin poisoning secondary to inhalation of smoke in a house fire

AI-generated summary

Nicholas Stephen Brown, 3-year-old, died in a house fire in Dandenong, Victoria on 7 February 2014. He was left unsupervised for approximately 30 minutes while his mother attended the pharmacy to purchase an asthma inhaler. The fire originated in the lounge room, most likely ignited by Nicholas playing with a barbeque-type gas lighter without child-resistance mechanisms. He inhaled carbon monoxide and hydrogen cyanide, suffering carboxyhaemoglobin poisoning. The coroner found that inadequate supervision combined with access to an unprotected ignition source contributed to this preventable death. The coroner recommended mandatory child-resistance safety standards for stove and barbeque lighters, similar to those already applied to disposable cigarette lighters since 1997. This case highlights the critical importance of child-proofing household ignition sources and maintaining appropriate supervision of young children.

AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes.

Contributing factors

  • lack of adult supervision for approximately 30 minutes
  • access to barbeque-type gas lighter without child-resistance mechanisms
  • child's fascination with lighter demonstrated the previous evening
  • lighter placed on pelmet within reach of young child capable of climbing

Coroner's recommendations

  1. Introduce a mandatory safety standard for barbeque-type stove lighters similar to the standards applied to disposable cigarette lighters, particularly noting the need for child resistance requirements
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