The correct answer is Shielded Twisted Pair (STP). According to the CompTIA Network+ N10-009 objectives, intermittent connectivity issues—especially in environments like hospitals—are often caused by electromagnetic interference (EMI) from medical imaging equipment, power systems, and other electronic devices. These environments are electrically noisy and can disrupt standard copper Ethernet cabling.
STP cabling is specifically designed to mitigate EMI by incorporating shielding around the twisted pairs. This shielding reduces external interference and improves signal stability without requiring a complete redesign of the network. Importantly, STP is significantly less expensive than deploying fiber-optic solutions while still being highly effective in environments prone to interference.
Single-mode fiber would eliminate EMI entirely, but it is far more costly due to specialized cabling, transceivers, and installation requirements. Twinaxial cable is typically used for short-distance, high-speed data center connections and is not appropriate for workstation connectivity. Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) is a Layer 2 loop-prevention protocol and has nothing to do with physical connectivity or interference issues.
The Network+ objectives stress choosing solutions that balance effectiveness, cost, and environmental suitability. In this case, upgrading to shielded twisted pair cabling provides the most practical and cost-effective resolution for intermittent connectivity in a hospital imaging environment.