I was in one of my
hospital’s operating rooms the other day
checking out a malfunction on a surgical video system. By chance, the
company’s sales rep was there on a call as well. As he assisted me
with troubleshooting, he pulled his Treo™ off his belt and called his
tech support. Imagine my mixed emotions—I was being assisted by a
very helpful vendor, and I was also the hospital’s radiofrequency
(RF) safety officer. We were well within 1 meter of several actively
functioning surgical systems. Needless to say, I did not immediately order
him to shut down his phone; we stepped back from the equipment so as to
give 1 meter of clearance. I gratefully accepted his help and his free
loaner equipment and never said another word about his cell phone use.
Something about “not biting the hand that gives you help and free
stuff” and such. …
In any other circumstance, who would have the heart to
interrupt a cell phone conversation as a family member was relaying some
very emotional news?
Controlling cell phone use in hospitals is becoming
yet another item in the wardrobe of the “emperor’s new
clothes” in the hospital industry. Signage, policies banning cell
phones, restricting their use to certain areas—all of these are, in
my humble opinion, placebos at best. Cell phone policy discussions
are one of the recurrent hot topics on the Internet discussion forum
“BIOMEDTALK,” and for good reason.
In reality, the floodgates are open, and we will never
get them shut again. Cell phones are, without a doubt, the “crack
cocaine” of the technology world. I have found myself working in care
areas with my own cell phone in my lab coat pocket. I now have a new NEC
microcell phone supplied to me by the hospital communication department. I
am completely hooked on it at this time and would never give it up
willingly. I cannot imagine being a patient or family member in crisis, or
a doctor juggling office and hospital duties, without having a cell phone
at all times. Caregivers working long hours need to stay in touch with
families outside of the hospital. Vendors providing both critical and
ancillary services also need cellular communication. The “need”
for cellular phone technology is without question. And, not only do we need
to consider cellular communication, we also need to consider Wi-Fi—a
subject for another article.
At this point, we as an industry need to focus on risk
avoidance, due diligence, and defensive biomedical engineering. To that
end, I would suggest the following be considered when addressing cell phone
issues in your facilities.
• Review your inventory—identify medical
devices that are not likely to meet IEC 60601 RF immunity standards. Remove
and replace them with equipment that is designed—in theory—to
be immune to RF interference. Base this plan on risk, start with the old
Baxter pca-2 type stuff, and move on from there.
• As you do with material safety data sheets,
require and compile a library of declarations of conformity (DOC) on all
electrical equipment in the care environment. Maintain the library for
reference at all times.
• Make it policy that any vendor who cannot
provide a DOC (or equivalent) cannot sell to the hospital.
• Install a distributed antenna system with
bidirectional amplifiers at the head end for each of the major cell carrier
system frequencies in your area.
• Educate staff and caregivers, and implement
signage touting the 1-meter rule about cell
phone use near functioning medical devices. Have a comprehensive education
and public relations plan to promote responsible cell phone use and
etiquette.
• Appoint an active, well-qualified RF safety
officer, and implement comprehensive and reasonable polices. Obtain the
necessary “buy in” to your RF safety policy from all
possible affected entities within your facility.
• Demonstrate that you have done “due
diligence”; have a sound risk-avoidance strategy in place; and
involve risk management, the safety committee, and your compliance officer
in the program.
• Address all types and modalities of personal
wireless devices in your plan.
• Have an accurate, comprehensive RF registry or
inventory of all emitters. If possible, overlay locations on the master
computer aided design building plan of your facility.
I am in the process of doing all of the
above—wish me luck.
J. Scot Mackeil, CBET, works at Jordan Hospital,
Plymouth, Mass.