Salimiya, Kuwait City, Kuwait – Worker loses fingers caught in elevator door

According to Emirates 24/7, a Filipino worker at a restaurant in the Salimiya neighborhood of Kuwait City lost some of his fingers after they became caught between the elevator and the elevator door on Monday, March 4, 2013.

Kuwait police described the elevator as “lacking minimum safety standards”, and the article notes that emergency personnel “had to smash the lift’s door” to release the man. Read the reporting article, published March 4, 2013.

Typically, elevators have door reopening devices such as “safety edges” or “scanner edges” which detect obstructions in the path of the door. A “safety edge” is typically a rubber bumper that retracts when it comes into contact with an obstruction. A “scanner edge” uses beams of light to detect when a beam is interrupted by an obstruction. However, even when these devices are present, there is still the possibility that something as small as a human finger could become entrapped between the outer hoistway doors.

Generally speaking, door entrapment accidents result in severe injuries if the elevator runs while the unsafe condition exists. Similar door entrapment incidents have occurred in the past when garments such as scarfs become entrapped and the elevator runs, leading to strangulation.

Bankstown, Sydney, Australia – Toddler loses three fingers to shopping center escalator

According to numerous Australian news sources, a three-year old boy fell on an escalator at Bankstown Shopping Centre, causing him to lose three fingers when they apparently became jammed in the escalator’s moving parts.

Read the full story by the Sydney Morning Herald, published December 21, 2012.

Although circumstances around the injury remain unclear, the description provided by the Sydney Morning Herald suggest that the young boy’s fingers were perhaps caught between the steps as the steps collapsed together at the destination landing. Another possibility is that the toddler fell as he approached the destination landing, and perhaps fell in such a way that his fingers were entrapped by a missing or damaged comb plate.

Modern escalators are equipped with safety devices that would normally prevent either scenario from causing serious injuries. For example, if the boy’s fingers were trapped in the comb plate, a comb plate safety switch would normally detect that a foreign object (such as the boy’s fingers) were trapped in the comb plate, causing the comb plate to rise, and stopping the escalator. However, because a toddler’s fingers are particularly delicate, it is plausible that the safety devices, if they were present, were not activated because even a small amount of force would still cause severe trauma.

We will publish updates on this story should they become available.