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Journal Article

Citation

Mortelmans LJ, Van Springel GL, Van Boxstael S, Herrijgers J, Hoflacks S. Prehosp. Disaster Med. 2009; 24(5): 430-432.

Affiliation

Department of Emergency Medicine and Security Consultant, AZ Klina, Brasschaat, Belgium. luc.mortelmans@klina.be

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

20066646

Abstract

Two regional hospitals were struck by lightning during a one-month period. The first hospital, which had 236 beds, suffered a direct strike to the building. This resulted in a direct spread of the power peak and temporary failure of the standard power supply. The principle problems, after restoring standard power supply, were with the fire alarm system and peripheral network connections in the digital radiology systems. No direct impact on the hardware could be found. Restarting the servers resolved all problems. The second hospital, which had 436 beds, had a lightning strike on the premises and mainly experienced problems due to induction. All affected installations had a cable connection from outside in one way or another. The power supplies never were endangered. The main problem was the failure of different communication systems (telephone, radio, intercom, fire alarm system). Also, the electronic entrance control went out. During the days after the lightening strike, multiple software problems became apparent, as well as failures of the network connections controlling the technical support systems. There are very few ways to prepare for induction problems. The use of fiber-optic networks can limit damage. To the knowledge of the authors, these are the first cases of lightning striking hospitals in medical literature.


Language: en

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