Medical Air Systems for Healthcare Facilities

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Medical air systems are a vital element of all hospitals and most other healthcare facilities. The engineer must consider expense, capacity, physical size and weight, space limitations, and mechanical and electrical utility availability in choosing a system for a particular project. It is important to coordinate the equipment selections with the owner as well as other engineering and architectural disciplines. The first priority is life safety. Medical air is used for respiratory therapy and calibration of medical devices for respiratory application. Providing clean, oil-free air is mandatory. The medical air system should not be used to supply air for any other purpose (e.g., hospital laboratory use) because of the opportunities for contamination of the distribution system. If a patient inhales medical air contaminated by oil from a defunct compressor or nitrogen from a brazing purge, the consequences could be irreversible. In addition, a utility or pipeline shutdown must be coordinated with the hospital staff to prevent an accidental service termination while patients are connected to the system. Engineers should be aware of the requirements before designing any medical gas system. Distribution Systems Medical compressed air systems must be designed to prevent the introduction of contaminants or liquid into the pipeline. Medical air systems must: • be supplied from cylinders, bulk containers, or medical air compressor sources; or reconstituted from oxygen USP and oil-free, dry nitrogen • meet requirements of the medical air • contain no detectable liquid hydrocarbons


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