fyi
1 posted on
12/05/2022 7:00:41 AM PST by
devane617
To: devane617
Well that’s horrible. Hopefully he felt nothing…
2 posted on
12/05/2022 7:02:11 AM PST by
EEGator
To: devane617
RIP. Strange way to die, on a holiday no less.
3 posted on
12/05/2022 7:03:21 AM PST by
drSteve78
(Je suis Deplorable STILL)
To: devane617
Better to burn out, than to fade away.
5 posted on
12/05/2022 7:04:25 AM PST by
Dr. Franklin
("A republic, if you can keep it." )
To: devane617
Human Spontaneous Combustion?................
6 posted on
12/05/2022 7:06:31 AM PST by
Red Badger
(Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
To: devane617
The only two accelerants that I could see that may possibly have been there under normal circumstances are alcohol and oxygen. He was probably on O2 before coding... not sure why there would have been any alcohol present on the patient unless they just wiped down an area of his body or perhaps spilled the alcohol on the patient or on his bed. O2 could have been leaking under the gown and bedding.
Really a horrible tragedy, especially during the holidays.
7 posted on
12/05/2022 7:12:34 AM PST by
RouxStir
(No Peein' in the Gene Pool )
To: devane617
Hey, how was your Thanksgiving?
8 posted on
12/05/2022 7:14:21 AM PST by
Delta 21
(MAGA Republican is my pronoun.)
To: devane617
9 posted on
12/05/2022 7:17:12 AM PST by
MarMema
(No bugs for consumption)
To: devane617
Something is missing in this story, IMO.
10 posted on
12/05/2022 7:18:10 AM PST by
Gaffer
To: devane617
Somebody used alcohol based hand sanitizer instead of conducting gel on the defibrillator panels.
To: devane617
“Then they started the paddles, and it just blew up, everything,” Kathy told WKRN. “I saw that, and I just burst out.”
—
From the description, it sounds like high oxygen levels might have resulted in the explosive fire. Horrible.
To: devane617
died in Tennessee on Thanksgiving day after he caught on fire as hospital staff attempted to use a defibrillator on him If they were defibrillating, he was “dead” before being burned, as he was in cardiac arrest. I guess they got a pulse back. He was probably pretty sick. Tragic story.
The presence of oxygen in therapeutic quantities isn’t an issue — it’s in use all the time, particularly during a resuscitation effort.
I’ve seen defibrillation pads arc and catch fire once, when they were damaged under CPR compressions.
13 posted on
12/05/2022 7:24:54 AM PST by
FoxInSocks
("Hope is not a course of action." — M. O'Neal, USMC)
To: devane617
With too many now rejecting the jab, the medical community has to resort to more draconian measures.
To: devane617
Can the metal particles in the covid vax short out?
18 posted on
12/05/2022 7:36:08 AM PST by
ryderann
To: devane617
Horrible for his wife to have witnessed this. Usually family members are escorted from the ER room if things are not going well. My guess is there was some kind of flammable accelerant present. I agree hand sanitizer used instead of defibrillator gel would be a good possibility.
To: devane617
29 posted on
12/05/2022 10:00:22 AM PST by
Nifster
(OI see puppy dogs in the clouds )
To: devane617
Better call Olivia Dunham and Peter & Walter Bishop...
30 posted on
12/05/2022 10:59:59 AM PST by
SuperLuminal
(Where is the next Sam Adams when we so desperatly need him)
To: devane617
Decades after Apollo 1 and so-called professionals still don’t respect safety protocols with regards to pure O2???
31 posted on
12/06/2022 9:11:28 AM PST by
logi_cal869
(-cynicus the "concern troll" a/o 10/03/2018 /!i!! &@$%&*(@ -)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson