The floors of medical operating theaters were required by code to have a conductivity within a specified range when a particular anesthetic was being used.
The resistance was high enough to prevent lethal ground fault currents to flow, yet low enough to discharge static charges.
I once designed an operating theater and obtained the appropriate code.
The code stated the limits and also a method for field testing and verifying the resistivity of the flooring.
I spoke to a doctor who was both a surgeon and an anesthesiologist.
He related that in the early days of that anesthetic there had been incidents where the surgeon, using a high frequency scalpel which cauterizes as it cuts, inadvertently cut into the lung cavity.
The gas exploded with the death of the patient and injuries to the operating team.
Hence anti static mats or flooring.
ps. That anesthetic is no longer used.
Bill
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"Why not the best?"
Jimmy Carter