ENTC 4350.ppt
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1、ENTC 4350,Electrical Safety,Hospital electrical safety begins with the principles that we have discussed. An electrical shock is always unpleasant, but it can be lethal in the intensive care unit.,It is extremely important that all hospital personnel be constantly on the watch for manufacturing defe
2、cts or wear and tear of critical parts. There are documented cases where equipment from reputable manufacturers was delivered with ground wires disconnected, cords broken, and improperly installed plugs. In the meantime, there is still the patient; it is your patient and your responsibility. You are
3、 the one who must be suspicious and check the equipment when it comes from the factory.,Even if equipment is in perfect condition when it arrives from the manufacturer, it is subject to the normal wear and tear of daily hospital use. This type of deterioration may be very severe if the equipment is
4、dragged around, in a great rush, from one room to another in response to emergencies. Once again, the part of the system that is most likely to be damaged is the cord and plug assembly.,Quite often, the damage is not visible on a mere surface examination; you have to get out your VOM or continuity t
5、ester and test it. Connect the continuity tester or VOM between the ground plug on the end of the cord and the metal case of the instrument. If the test light goes out when you wiggle or pull on the wire, or If the resistance measured by the VOM is erratic when you move the cord, then the appliance
6、is defective.,If your hospital has a red tag service that allows defective equipment to be marked for immediate pickup and repair, all is well. However, if there is any danger that the equipment might be used in patient service before the repair is done, the best thing to do is take your handy banda
7、ge scissors and cut the plug off. That may sound like a drastic measure (surgery is always drastic), but in this case, it is quite justified.,Another thing to watch for is someone elses home repair.” This is particularly apparent in hospitals where one sees cracked cords or broken plugs repaired wit
8、h adhesive tape. That cord or plug cracked for a reason: either age or misuse is usually to blame.,If the insulation is cracked, most of the conducting wires may be broken, too. Just suppose that the last strand of ground wire broke when it was being used on your patient, and reflect upon the result
9、s of our computations with the current divider equations previously.,In this regard, you have to watch the other staff membersi.e., the orderlies, aides, and so onsince the natural human tendency is to put the broken item back on the shelf and take one that looks all right. Quite often, an aide will
10、 hesitate to report defective equipment for fear of being thought to be a troublemaker. Only endless repetition, and possibly a cash prize for reporting defects, will alleviate this situation.,It should he clear to everyone that if any defective equipment is noted, or if a tingle is sometimes felt w
11、hen using a piece of equipment, this is a signal to stop using the equipment and report it.,The patient is truly at your mercy, and equipment that comes near to him or her must be in proper condition. At this point, you might be wondering just what proper condition is and how leakage occurs. The spe
12、cifications on electrical leakage are complex and subject to change; however, two good points to keep in mind are the leakage to the chassis of hospital equipment and the leakage through any patient-connected leads.,With the ground wire disconnected, the chassis leakage is limited to 100 mA, and the
13、 patient-lead leakage must not exceed 50 mA. There are many causes for leakage: defective insulators, damaged wire, dirt, water, and the radiation leakage.,Figure 14.3 Let-go current versus frequency Percentile values indicate variability of let-go current among individuals. Let-go currents for wome
14、n are about two-thirds the values for men. (Reproduced, with permission, from C. F. Dalziel, “Electric Shock,“ Advances in Biomedical Engineering, edited by J. H. U. Brown and J. F. Dickson IIII, 1973, 3, 223-248.),Figure 14.1 Physiological effects of electricity Threshold or estimated mean values a
15、re given for each effect in a 70 kg human for a 1 to 3 s exposure to 60 Hz current applied via copper wires grasped by the hands.,They all add up to a problem for the hospital.,The danger of having a single hospital appliance with a defective three-wire cord is illustrated below. Here we show a pati
16、ent in an electrical bed with a three-wire cord that is good.,This means that when the patient puts his hand on the bed rail, he is grounded. too. There is nothing wrong with that until someone brings over a second appliance, like an ECG or an apnea monitor, which has a defective three-wire cord. Th
17、e manufacturer designed the appliance with the idea that the three-wire cord would be operational and that stray leakage in his unit would be grounded off to the case and removed by the ground wire. Unfortunately. in this case, the third wire is broken, and the leakage current goes back to the power
18、house via the patient with disastrous results.,Every time you wheel a piece of electrical equipment up to a patient, you have to ask yourself, “Am I sure that the ground wire is OK?”,Figure 14.5 Effect of entry points on current distribution (a) Macroshock, externally applied current spreads through
19、out the body. (b) Microshock, all the current applied through an intracardiac catheter flows through the heart. (From F. J. Weibell, “Electrical Safety in the Hospital,“ Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 1974, 2, 126-148.),UNDERWRITERS LABORATORIES STANDARDS,There have been some gaps in the design o
20、f medical equipment, but these holes will be closed as more hospitals require that all new equipment meet the Underwriters Laboratories Standards for Medical and Dental Equipment (UL 544). The important thing about UL 544 is its marking code for guidance in equipment application.,Type A apparatus, t
21、he highest grade, is suitable for electrically susceptible patients. This means that the leakage current has been held to the lowest possible value, and the greatest measure of safety has been provided for patients in intensive care, cardiac care, or catheterization units.,Type A equipment is very c
22、ostly, and for this reason, a somewhat lower standard is used for type B, which applies to equipment not suitable for electrically susceptible patients. This equipment is not defective or poorly built. The designation is simply a recognition that the precautions needed in the CCU, for example, are n
23、ot appropriate for the general medical patient.,The last, or type C, equipment label is intended for laboratory apparatus where patient contact is unlikely. In some cases, no marking will be used on type C equipment, but the hospital may want to have stickers saying not for use outside the laborator
24、y area or not for use on patients. The UL 544 code designation is one more item to be checked when new apparatus is brought in for patient use.,Regulation of Medical Devices,In 1976, the U.S. Congress passed what are known as the Medical Device Amendments (Public Law 94-295) to the Federal Food, Dru
25、g, and Cosmetics Act. Further amendments were made in 1990 in the Safe Medical Devices Act.,Medical devices are defined as: any item promoted for a medical purpose that does not rely on chemical action to achieve its intended effect.,Medical devices are classified in two ways: The division of such d
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