Published Jan 24, 2008
dawngloves, BSN, RN
2,399 Posts
How the heck did this happen???
MINNEAPOLIS - Oxygen ignited inside a special hood worn by a newborn infant in a hospital, burning the boy's head and face and leaving him in critical condition.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080124/ap_on_re_us/newborn_incubator_fire
I'm now wondering if it was static?
Spidey's mom, ADN, BSN, RN
11,305 Posts
Oh . . . that poor baby . . . .and nurse. What a horrible accident.
steph
MegNeoNurse
241 Posts
How very sad I hope the lil guy ends up doing okay. Very very tragic.
There are lots of scary things lurking around the NICU that can cause fires. Purell+Static+Oxygen=FIRE!
babiesRmylife
125 Posts
Thats horrible! How sad for everybody involved.
RainDreamer, BSN, RN
3,571 Posts
Yeah, how did that happen?!?!
Wow, that's just awful. Sounds like he was a healthy kid with a bit of RDS ..... now he's tubed and has multiple burns all over. Dang
MommyandRN
342 Posts
Very sad. Maybe Vaseline/petroleum was on him? Isn't that dangerous when used around 02?
grlgid
38 Posts
That poor sweetie, thank goodness burn units believe in good sedation.
During the summer we had a baby from general nursery come and stay with us over the long weekend until he could get into the burn unit. He recieved 2nd and 3rd degree burns on his leg/groin area from a defective heat lamp during his circ. He went straight to surgery from the circumcision and then came to us. Poor baby.
Tina
Elvish, BSN, DNP, RN, NP
4 Articles; 5,259 Posts
Oh my gosh. It's so easy to get complacent in well-baby nursery to think all is well. Crap can hit the fan in a heartbeat!
gail323
17 Posts
Last update: January 24, 2008 - 11:39 AMThe baby boy was only 12 hours old when fire burst out in his bassinet at Mercy Hospital in Coon Rapids on Tuesday.And he was only 14 hours old when he was rushed to the Hennepin County Medical Center burn unit, the youngest patient ever treated there.By Wednesday, the boy named Maverick was in stable but critical condition with burns on...
Last update: January 24, 2008 - 11:39 AM
The baby boy was only 12 hours old when fire burst out in his bassinet at Mercy Hospital in Coon Rapids on Tuesday.
And he was only 14 hours old when he was rushed to the Hennepin County Medical Center burn unit, the youngest patient ever treated there.
By Wednesday, the boy named Maverick was in stable but critical condition with burns on...
Read article in its entirety:
http://www.startribune.com/lifestyle/health/14024831.html
FlyingScot, RN
2,016 Posts
Something terrible happened for sure but it wasn't the oxygen catching on fire. Oxygen doesn't burn it just makes anything flammable burn faster and at a greater intensity. Static would probably not do it. It's more likely something caught fire in the heater arm and dropped onto the blankets that would have been saturated with O2 causing them to ignite quickly and burn hot and fast. This is why nothing should be attached to the heater arm like twill tape to hold up gastroschesis silos. I've even seen blankets tossed on top, tape for IV's and ETT tubes hanging from it. Makes me cringe every time. Now because of this error printed in the paper we are going to have freaked out parents thinking their child is going to be harmed from exploding O2.
BittyBabyGrower, MSN, RN
1,823 Posts
We just read this at work! Man, that is terrible! I agree with the poster that said maybe something fell from the heating element...I know that when ours sit for a while they get dust up there and they smell like they are going to ignite! I am sure some sentinel event is coming from this when they figure it out. We did have 2 parents kind of act freaky today about their kid in a hood, and it took alot of persuasion to make them feel safe!