DonHealth Care Facilities. Buildings or portions of buildings in which medical, dental, psychiatric, nursing, obstetrical, or surgical care are provided. Health care facilities include, but are not limited to, hospitals, nursing homes, limited care facilities, clinics, medical and dental offices, and ambulatory care centers, whether permanent or movable.
Patient Care Area. Any portion of a health care facility wherein patients are intended to be examined or treated. Areas of a health care facility in which patient care is administered are classified as general care areas or critical care areas, either of which may be classified as a wet location. The governing body of the facility designates these areas in accordance with the type of patient care anticipated and with the following definitions of the area classification.
What are X-RAY equipment, high powered lights, electrically operated chairs, etc then? Decorations?Originally posted by bennie:
Don:
Dental patient care does not use electrical examining, diagnostic, or treatment equipment.
Maybe not with the mouth open, but if you have an infection or otherwise sick, yes the body resistance drops dramaticallyOriginally posted by bennie:
Does the body resistance go down when the mouth is open?
I got all sorts of gear around my place, but an X-ray machine is one thing clearly lacking in the inventory. No electrically operated chairs here either...and I'm [normally] in an un-anethetized condition and able to fend for myself.Originally posted by bennie:
Why would the equipment be dangerous in a dental office, when it is not a hazard in your home.
OSHA considers Nitrous "flammable" and requires special handling procedures. Technically IT doesn't "burn", but from a practical POV, any powerful oxidizer is just as dangerous as something that is technically flammable when in the presense of something that can burn (like your cloths perhaps?). There's three dead Apollo era astronauts who died in a flash fire in a pure O2 environment who'd testify to this.Originally posted by roger:
Tony, Nitrous is not flammable and I would be curious as to where (besides third world countries) flammable anesthesia is still being used. The Grounding System test criteria for patient care areas and ansthesia areas O.R.'s as outlined in NFPA 99 4.3.3.1 would reflect this.
Roger
that still doesn't change the fact that it isn't "flammable" or the way NFPA 99 considers rooms in a "health care facility".OSHA considers Nitrous "flammable" and requires special handling procedures.
have to do with this conversation? Pure oxygen is never the "enviroment" in an Operating Theater, it is confined to a Med Gas delivery system. (note confined as in a pipe and mask)There's three dead Apollo era astronauts who died in a flash fire in a pure O2 environment who'd testify to this.
You need to read it again. You're confusing critical care with general care. In any case, BOTH are instances of "patient care" areas. 517.13 makes no special distinction between critical or general care, BOTH require special methods.Originally posted by bennie:
Unless there is physical contact with an electrical device, that can produce a lethal circuit, no special wiring method is required.
Alas, I see no exceptions there, just a bunch of motherhood and apple pie type language.Originally posted by bennie:
I also read 517.11