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Saint Barnabas Burn Center Offers Tips on Lightning Safety LIVINGSTON, NJ – Lightning causes more casualties in the United States than any other weather-related phenomena, except floods. Each year, lightning is responsible for an average of 100 deaths and hundreds more injuries. Most of these injuries could be prevented if individuals engaged in safe behavior during thunderstorms. As part of its mission to educate the public about burn prevention and fire safety, the Education Department of the Burn Foundation and Burn Center at Saint Barnabas Medical Center has compiled factual information on lightning safety. Lightning facts Approximately 75 percent of lightning strikes occur in the summer months. Risk is highest in the late afternoon, usually between 2 and 6 p.m. Those most likely to be hurt are frequently engaged in activities involving open fields and recreation areas, standing under trees, or playing water-related sports, or golfing. Males are struck by lightning four times more often than females. Lightning safety The most important thing to remember is that no place outside is completely safe when a thunderstorm is near. When planning outdoor activities always check with a reliable forecast such as the National Weather Service for storm warnings and plan accordingly. The National Lightning Safety Institute created the safety slogan, "If you can see it – flee it; if you can hear it – clear it," referring to both thunder and lightning, as warning signs of impending danger. Thunder indicates one is already within the range of where the next ground flash may occur. Individuals should, therefore, seek shelter immediately. Because lightning can travel as far as ten miles, strikes can occur "out of the clear blue sky." Many serious lightning casualties occur as storms approach because people ignore these warnings. It is, therefore, very important to seek adequate shelter immediately. In addition, 50 percent of all lightning deaths occur just after the storm has passed when people no longer perceive danger. Experts recommend that individuals wait 30 minutes after the last flash of lightning or sound of thunder before resuming outdoor activities. Other early warning signs are a sudden drop in temperature, increase in wind or rainfall, and increasing, thickening and darkening clouds. In 1998, the American Meteorological Society Conference, formed the "Lightning Safety Group" which drafted many of the following safety recommendations: Choose a safe location during a thunderstorm:
Avoid being in or near:
If you are unable to reach shelter:
Become a very small target:
According to Sue D’Alessio, Burn Educator for The Saint Barnabas Burn Center, in the event someone is struck by lightning, bystanders should call 911. “Victims of lightning strikes do not carry an electrical charge and can be touched immediately with no risk to the rescuer,” she explains. For more information on lightning safety, visit: www.nssl.noaa.gov or www.lightningsafety.com. For any type of Burn Education Program, including lightning safety, please contact the Saint Barnabas Burn Foundation’s Education Department at (973) 322-8071 or (732) 557-3275.
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