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Journal Article

Citation

des Robert V, Saint-Jean L, Corcostegui SP, Romary E, Derkenne C. Aerosp. Med. Hum. Perform. 2023; 94(10): 792-795.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Aerospace Medical Association)

DOI

10.3357/AMHP.6232.2023

PMID

37726899

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Many current cell phone (mobile phone, smartphone) batteries are lithium-ion. These batteries can overheat and catch fire under certain conditions. If it happens during a flight or air activity, this might compromise aviation safety. We report a case of a man whose phone caught fire during a parachute jump.

CASE REPORT: The individual, a member of Police Special Forces, is required to regularly perform parachute jumps. During the incident flight, the man had a cell phone in a pocket that ignited during the jump. He was able to land and then extract the phone with burns requiring acute medical care and later a skin graft.

DISCUSSION: This is a cautionary tale of lithium-ion batteries in flight. Many other situations could also occur with these batteries. There is little medical documentation of the risk of fire with lithium-ion batteries causing injuries during flight operations. To reduce the risk of fire, the devices should be powered down and phones should not be worn directly touching the skin. Damaged devices are more prone to overheating.des Robert V, Saint-Jean L, Corcostegui S-P, Romary E, and Derkenne C. Burnt by his cellphone during a parachute jump. Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2023; 94(10):792-795.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Male; *Aviation; *Burns/etiology; *Cell Phone; Lithium; Smartphone

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