Static Electricity In Hospital Operating Suites - Direct And Related Hazards And Pertinent Remedies - Preface And Summary

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 63
- File Size:
- 32268 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1953
Abstract
MANY of the gases and vapors used in anesthesia form explosive mixtures with oxygen or air. Sources of ignition for these mixtures always have existed in operating and anesthetizing areas. When ether was first introduced, candles,5 gaslights, and coal stoves caused fires and mild explosions of the vapor-air mixtures. Today the chief causes of ignition are electrical. Fires and explosions are still much too frequent; and, because many of the mixtures are rich in oxygen, the explosions sometimes are very violent. Obvious sources of ignition, such as electric-power sparks and arcs in open motors, switches, and receptacles, as well as exposed incandescent wires and hot plates, usually are recognized by hospital personnel and corrected. A source of ignition that is not so obvious to many is static electricity. Until quite recently the presence of this hazard in a large majority of anesthetizing areas was not even suspected. However, numerous explosions-many of them fatal to patients-have been attributed, with good reason, to sparks from static electricity.
Citation
APA:
(1953) Static Electricity In Hospital Operating Suites - Direct And Related Hazards And Pertinent Remedies - Preface And SummaryMLA: Static Electricity In Hospital Operating Suites - Direct And Related Hazards And Pertinent Remedies - Preface And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1953.