Cellphone users warned of lightning risk (Reuters) Updated: 2006-06-25 11:38
People should not use mobile phones outdoors during thunderstorms because of
the risk of being struck by lightning, doctors said Friday.
They reported the case of a 15-year-old girl who was using her phone in a
park when she was hit during a storm. Although she was revived, she suffered
persistent health problems and was using a wheelchair a year after the accident.
 A man speaks on his mobile phone in the rain
in Beijing in a 2002 file photo. People should not use mobile phones
outdoors during thunderstorms because of the risk of being struck by
lightning, doctors said Friday. [Reuters] |
"This rare phenomenon is a public health issue, and education is necessary to
highlight the risk of using mobile phones outdoors during stormy weather to
prevent future fatal consequences from lighting strike injuries," said Swinda
Esprit, a doctor at Northwick Park Hospital in England.
Esprit and other doctors at the hospital added in a letter to the British
Medical Journal that usually when someone is struck by lightning, the high
resistance of the skin conducts the flash over the body in what is known as a
flashover.
But if a metal object, such as a phone, is in contact with the skin it
disrupts the flashover and increases the odds of internal injuries and death.
The doctors added that three fatal cases of lightning striking people while
using mobile phones have been reported in newspapers in China, South Korea and
Malaysia.
"The Australian Lightning Protection Standard recommends that metallic
objects, including cordless or mobile phones, should not be used (or carried)
outdoors during a thunderstorm," Esprit added.
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