Oxygen Tanks May Have Caused Honolulu Ambulance Fire To Spread Faster, Experts Say
No official cause has been given as multiple agencies continue to investigate last week’s blaze outside Adventist Health Castle hospital.
After a Honolulu ambulance fire injured a paramedic and left a 91-year-old patient dead last week, fire experts are theorizing that an electrical issue may have created a spark, ignited something flammable and spread quickly because of the oxygen tanks on board.听
It’s one possibility that would explain how the three essential ingredients for a fire 鈥 oxygen, heat and fuel 鈥 came together, said Walter Nugent, a former fire investigator who chairs the fire science department at New Jersey City University.
“There had to be a few things that lined up, unfortunately, to allow this fire to start and have it spread as quick as it did,” he said.听
Waimanalo resident Fred Kaneshiro, who was being transported inside the ambulance, died at the scene of the Aug. 24 fire outside Adventist Health Castle hospital. Paramedic Jeff Wilkinson was critically injured and was being treated at the Straub Medical Center’s burn unit.
Multiple agencies are investigating, and no cause has been identified yet. But officials听appear to be exploring the possibility of an electrical issue. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives sent an electrical engineer from its fire research lab to assist in the investigation, 听
It’s unclear whether equipment on board the ambulance or the vehicle itself was faulty. The county’s Emergency Medical Services department shared ambulance maintenance records with investigators. However, the division declined to share them with the public. Doing so could interfere with the investigation and lead to “speculative, incomplete, and unsubstantiated opinions and conclusions as to the cause of this event,鈥 the division said in a statement.
鈥淎ll federal, state and county stakeholders believe that the public and the families of the victims involved in this event deserve a complete and thorough investigation into the cause of the ambulance fire,” it added. “Upon the conclusion of the investigation, disclosable records will be released.鈥
Local emergency professionals reacting to the ambulance fire said they鈥檇 never seen anything like it. Indeed, ambulance fires are relatively rare — but not unprecedented.听
News reports from across the country in recent years show ambulance fires have occurred in many places, including , , , , , , , , and in . Officials have cited , and in those cases.听
Photos and video of the Kailua blaze show flames coming from inside the ambulance cabin where the patient was located and not around the ambulance鈥檚 engine. That would suggest the fire began in the patient compartment, according to Nugent.听
The use of compressed oxygen tanks could鈥檝e increased the percentage of oxygen in the air of the confined space, Nugent said. The oxygen enrichment alone can鈥檛 ignite a fire, Nugent said, but it does allow it to spread faster.听
鈥淲hat’s going to matter is how high the oxygen content was in the area of whatever the heat source was,鈥 he said.听
Jack Minassian, an associate professor of fire science at the University of Hawaii, offered the example of NASA鈥檚 in 1967 when a bundle of wires sparked in a pure oxygen atmosphere. Three astronauts who were aboard the spacecraft for a launch rehearsal were killed.听
A similar scenario may have occurred in Kailua, according to Minassian, who is not involved in the investigation.听
鈥I would speculate that because the paramedic did not have enough time to save himself, he got burned, and he wasn’t able to save the patient, I believe there was probably a leak of oxygen inside and some kind of electrical sparks,鈥 Minassian said.听
Honolulu ambulances carry all sorts of equipment that could potentially cause a spark, including laptops, radios and other battery-operated devices, according to Patty Dukes, the former chief for Honolulu Emergency Medical Services.听
There are also electrical fixtures you鈥檇 find anywhere, like lightbulbs and electric sockets, Nugent said.听
鈥淎nything that has power running to it could fail,鈥 Nugent said. 鈥淎ny of those could, in theory, become a heat source.鈥澨
Ambulances also carry defibrillators, which are meant to revive ailing patients with an electric shock but can ignite fires in an oxygen-enriched atmosphere when the paddles are not appropriately attached to the patient, according to the .听
For instance, the clothes of an ambulance patient in Connecticut caught fire when a paramedic attempted to restart her heart with a defibrillator in 2004, the . And last year, a woman in Texas was badly burned and died after hospital staff used a defibrillator on her, . The fire reportedly ignited as personnel tried to resuscitate her in the presence of an oxygen tank.
A similar case occurred at a different Texas hospital in 2019 when a defibrillator sparked while oxygen was left on, causing a fire that filled the hospital floor with smoke, according to the 听
Whether the defibrillator was in use at the time of the incident in Kailua is unclear and EMS wouldn鈥檛 say.听
Still, the odds of ambulance equipment sparking a flame are generally low, according to Dukes. In her 40-year career, Duke said she鈥檚 never seen ambulance equipment generate smoke or ignite. Plus, EMS personnel are supposed to check the equipment in the ambulance every shift, she said.听
“I never saw a spontaneous combustion,” she said.听
Overall, fires happen in just a fraction of the millions of ambulance rides completed every year, most of which occur safely. Nugent said they’re not a reason to avoid calling 911 in an emergency.听
鈥淚 just wouldn’t want people to think the chance of a fire is so great in an ambulance that they鈥檙e less likely to call and go to the hospital,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t’s not likely, and to possibly change your medical care or treatment would be more hazardous,” he added. “This was a tragedy that although serious, is rare.鈥
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Christina Jedra is a journalist for Civil Beat focused on investigative and in-depth reporting. You can reach her by email at cjedra@civilbeat.org or follow her on Twitter at .