{
medical} Humans need oxygen to
survive and take it from the
air through the
lungs by
breathing. Without oxygen the
brain can die from
anoxia or
hypoxia in less than five minutes, with permanent
brain damage possible in less than three minutes. An
injured person is often given pure oxygen by
EMTs and/or
paramedics or by a
physician in the
hospital emergency room. This is to increase the amount of oxygen reaching the
brain and other body parts, helping to stave off
shock.
Medical oxygen is typically found in
green canisters with clear
plastic tubing attached, and is given to a
patient through either a
mask or
nasal cannulae. The latter is popular in television and movie
portrayals of
oxygen administration because it allows the
actor /
patient to speak and
act dramatic, but much less effective for the
patient.
{fire science} Oxygen is necessary to the basic chemical reaction known as fire. Fire can be put out by depriving it of oxygen, or caused to grow by giving it more oxygen. Oxygen is thus one leg of the fire triangle. Firefighters deprive a fire of oxygen by smothering it with water, sand, foam or some other material. This is one way that water puts out fires; the other is by heat absorption. Oxygen canisters and tents (used medically as above) are a serious fire hazard, which is why smoking is prohibited near them.