Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Automatically Closing Handicap Access Door

Mechanical and Safety Engineering (MASE) Product Failure Injury Report

Product involved: Handicap access door

What happened: An elderly woman was injured when an automatic handicap access door closed on her, causing injury to her wrist as well as causing her to fall to the ground

Injuries: Wrist, broken hip

Recommendations: Automatically closing handicap access doors need to be equipped with sensors that stop and/or reverse the motion of the door when an obstacle is encountered.  The Americans with Disabilities Act has certain requirements that must be met.  Other standards may also apply, and engineering design protocol requires a safeguard for this clearly identified hazard.  Minimizing power to the door to perform its function properly would help minimize the severity of injuries resulting from contact with a closing door.  Touch sensors, motion sensors, pressure sensitive mats, and light beam sensors could all be used to determine if a person was in the path of the closing door(s).

OSHA/Standard violations?: No

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Ottoman Failure Resulting in Injuries

Mechanical and Safety Engineering (MASE) Product Failure Injury Report

Product involved: Ottoman

What happened: A woman sitting on an ottoman fell and received injuries when the ottoman she was seated on collapsed due to a catastrophic failure of the connection of one of the legs.

Injuries: Unknown

Recommendations: It is unknown at this time whether the failure was due to a design defect or a manufacturing/material defect.  Engineering calculations or finite element analysis (FEA) should have been used to ensure that the ottoman is adequately designed by the manufacturer.  Using engineering design principles as well as industry standards, with an adequate factor of safety to accommodate dynamic loading that occurs when a person drops down into the seat/ottoman; the ottoman could have been designed to safely support its occupants.  Adequate quality control procedures would likely have caught any material or manufacturing defect.

OSHA/Standard violations?: No

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Shuttle Bus Luggage Rack Accident

Mechanical and Safety Engineering (MASE) Product Failure Injury Report

Product involved: Shuttle bus luggage rack

What happened: A person riding an airport shuttle bus received head injuries when a large suitcase tipped out of the luggage rack and fell onto his head.

Injuries: Minor head injuries

Recommendations: Ensuring that luggage is properly secured is important to prevent accidents from moving luggage, especially when contact with a person is possible or probable.  A properly designed luggage rack would utilize full coverage guarding in directions that would likely result in contact with occupants, or a door or gate access.  Another alternative is placing support bars high enough to prevent luggage from tipping over the bar during hard braking or acceleration.

OSHA/Standard violations?: No

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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Paintball Eye Injury

Mechanical and Safety Engineering (MASE) Product Failure Injury Report

Product involved: Paintball marker

What happened: A child spectating a paintball game was hit in the eye.

Injuries: Partial blindness

Recommendations: Paintball games require proper eye protection to ensure participant safety.  Referees are also required to enforce safety rules and to stop game play if a hazardous situation occurs.  This particular injury was to a non-participant.  Spectator viewing areas must be properly safeguarded so onlookers are protected from the paintballs.  Doors and passageways are a common weakness at paintball fields.  Overlapped netting can protect onlookers and ensure paintballs do not leave the playing field.

OSHA/Standard violations?: No

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