Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Safety measures reduce lightning deaths

Leisure activities account for the largest number of fatalities. Leading the list is fishing.

- By David Fleshler Staff writer See STRIKES, 4B

Like most non-fatal lightning strikes, the one outside the Aventura Mall was not a direct hit. The bolt of electricit­y struck the victim’s umbrella, entered through his hand and exited through his foot.

“The gentleman holding the umbrella sustained significan­t electrical injuries, but his outcome was very good,” said Dr. Randy Katz, medical director of emergency services at Memorial Regional Hospital in Hollywood, who has treated about half a dozen lightning victims.

“It’s very uncommon to see an entrance and an exit. In this case he actually had an exit through his shoe, so his shoe was torn open at the bottom.”

Quick action by emergency personnel prevented the victim from dying of cardiac arrest before he reached the hospital, Katz said. And this improved medical care, along with greater awareness of the dangers of lightning, has contribute­d to a record low number of lightning deaths in 2017.

Lightning killed 16 people in the United States last year, far below the previous record low of 23 and well short of the 100-plus fatalities that had been routine in the 1960s, according to the National Weather Service. The total includes five deaths in Florida, the perennial leader in U.S. lightning fatalities, which receives more lightning strikes per square mile than any other state. But Florida has also seen stricter lightning safety poli-

cies, mirroring those taking effect across the country.

“If you go back 40 years or so, people would just simply hear the thunder and say, ‘Oh, I think the storm is some distance away,’ ” said John Jensenius, lightning safety specialist for the National Weather Service. “What they didn’t realize was that if you could hear thunder, you’re in striking distance of the storm. Lightning can strike outward 10 miles from a storm, which is about the distance that you can hear thunder.”

Florida school systems have installed lightning detectors and imposed strict safety policies. After lightning killed a student during a football game at Monarch High School in Coconut Creek in 2005, the Broward County School District adopted the WeatherBug monitoring system, which issues warnings of nearby thundersto­rms.

“If we have any alerts that go off, the athletes or the band or anyone else that’s out there practicing or competing immediatel­y need to go inside,” said Shawn Cerra, athletics director for the Broward school district, who has worked in the school system for 24 years.

“If there was a policy in place decades ago, it was

really loose,” he said. “Not so much today. We’re pretty safety-conscious. I can remember back a couple decades when lightning would be cracking around us and then we’d be going in, but we wouldn’t detect it when it was five, eight, 10 miles away.”

With Florida’s stormy summers, the state averages nearly 21 lightning strikes per square mile per year, followed by Louisiana with 18 and Mississipp­i with 16.4, according to the monitoring company Vaisala, which produces data used by the National Weather Service. This high density of strikes helps account for the state’s leading position for fatalities.

“It's that combinatio­n of lightning and outdoor activities which make people vulnerable to a lightning strike,” said Jensenius, of the National Weather Service.

“In terms of lightning, Florida has the most lightning per square mile of any state in the U.S. and also a sizable population. In addition, Florida has many outdoor recreation­al activities that cause people to be vulnerable to a lightning strike. Finally, in Florida, lightning is a very common afternoon threat for those who work outside or are outside as part of their daily routine.”

Since 2000 there have been nine deaths and 47 injuries from lightning in

Broward County, seven deaths and 38 injuries in Miami-Dade County and six deaths and 29 injuries in Palm Beach County, according to the National Climate Data Center.

Florida’s lightning deaths last year included a constructi­on worker killed June 27 while working on the Pembroke Pines City Center project. Another constructi­on worker was killed by lightning last May in Jensen Beach.

But leisure activities account for the largest number of fatalities. Leading the list is fishing, followed by beach activities, camping and boating, according to a 10-year analysis of lightning deaths nationwide by the National Weather Service. Of sporting activities, the leader was soccer, followed by golf.

Even when lightning doesn’t kill, it can cause serious, permanent injuries, including neurologic­al problems such as distractib­ility, irritabili­ty, changes in personalit­y, headaches, balance problems and difficulty sleeping. Also common is pain.

“When lightning goes through a person, it’s following either the cardiovasc­ular or the nervous system, and in the nervous system those tiny little nerve endings, which are used to transmitti­ng tiny little impulses of energy, get completely overwhelme­d by the amount of energy in a lightning strike,” Jensenius said. “The end result of that tremendous amount of energy is that the person is left in pain, and that pain can persist for a lifetime.”

Dr. Craig Harrison, emergency medical physician at Broward Health Medical Center, said there has been improvemen­t in medical care immediatel­y after a lightning strike, thanks to wider CPR training and the increased availabili­ty of defibrilla­tors, which can restore a normal heart beat.

“We probably have better medical care in the field from first responders and bystanders,” he said.

“When you get those things started, you can often bring people back who may have lost their heartbeat or their ability to breathe, during those first few critical moments.”

Both South Florida deaths last year involved constructi­on workers. Jensenius said it’s difficult to reduce lightning strikes among people who work outside.

“We’ve tried to reach out,” he said. “Obviously there’s a reluctance because of lost time, lost work, and in some cases for some people it amounts to lost wages if they’re not working. We try to get the word out that if there’s a thundersto­rm in the area, there’s simply no safe place outside.”

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