FARM ACCIDENT- PTO
ENTANGLEMENT DEATH
SUBJECT:
A farm owner/operator in Colorado
died of suffocation when his clothing became entangled in the machinery he was
attempting to adjust.The PTO continued to turn strangulating him.
SUMMARY:
The 42-year-old farmer was
fatally injured when he attempted to adjust the spacing of the cultivator he was
using. The deceased had stopped the forward motion of the tractor to which the
cultivator was attached, but left the engine of the tractor running. The
cultivator was equipped with a hydraulic-powered weeder bar that functioned off
of the tractor's power take-off (PTO). Because the engine was still running, the
weeder bar was rotating. The farmer raised the cultivator and climbed under it
to make adjustments. As the deceased was exiting from under the cultivator, his
jacket caught on the connecting bolt of the rotating weeder bar and twisted to
the point of strangulation. Coworkers discovered the body, and notified the
county sheriff and coroner. The farmer was pronounced dead at the scene. The
Colorado Department of Health (CDH) investigator concluded that to prevent
future similar occurrences, employers should:
- Ensure that all power sources are shut off
prior to making adjustments to machinery.
- Develop, implement, and enforce a comprehensive
written safety program
- Employers should conduct a job-site survey
on a regular basis to identify potential hazards, implement appropriate
control measures, and provide subsequent training to employees that specifically
addresses all identified hazards.
The family members indicated that
the cultivator the deceased was operating had a tendency to plug up with weeds
because the hilling wings were not adjusted properly. The one-year-old
cultivator was a "Dammer
Diker: manufactured by AG Engineering of Tri Cities, Washington.
This particular unit was equipped with a weeder bar that
is
manufactured by Coaldale Iron Products, LTD, Coaldale, Alberta,
Canada. The weeder bar is a hexagonal rod that is rotated by a
hydraulic drive unit powered
by the PTO of the tractor. The tractor being utilized with this
piece of equipment was a John Deere Model 4640.
The safety warning label
on the cultivator stated "DO NOT RIDE OR WORK ON MACHINE WHILE IN MOTION".
This safety precaution was more clearly stated in the owner-operator manual,
reading "DO NOT RIDE OR WORK IN MACHINE WHILE IT IS OPERATING OR IN
MOTION".
CAUSE OF DEATH:
The cause of death as listed on
the death certificate was suffocation due to or as a consequence of clothes
caught in the cultivator PTO
SAFETY RECOMMENDATIONS
Recommendation #1:
Ensure that all power sources are shut off prior to making adjustments to
machinery.Safety precautions recommended by the manufacturer should be strictly
followed. In this incident, the manufacturer had a safety warning label on the
equipment and safety precautions listed in the owner-operator manual warning
that the equipment should not be worked in while it is in motion.
Recommendation #2:
Employers should develop, implement, and enforce a comprehensive written safety
program. This employer did not have a written comprehensive safety program.
All employers should evaluate the tasks done by workers to identify all
potential hazards. The employer should then develop and implement a safety
program addressing these hazards, provide worker training in safe work
procedures and implement appropriate control measures.
Recommendation #3:
Employers should conduct a job site survey on a regular basis to identify
potential hazards, implement appropriate control measures, and provide
subsequent training to employees that specifically addresses all identified site
hazards. A thorough inspection of the equipment would have revealed the
potential hazard of the rotating shaft and connecting bolt. One appropriate
control measure would be to replace the bolt with a steel roll pin that does not
extend beyond the shaft edges.
FARM ACCIDENT- SAFETY
PREVENTION
While this PTO had a warning
sign, this does not alleviate the responsibility of the manufacturer to make and
sell safe farming equipment. PTO shafts and other spinning or rotating parts be
shielded to prevent entanglements and other farming deaths. Just a simple
1/4 inch tall bolt extending above the spinning shaft is enough to catch
clothing leading to an entanglement death. The farm equipment manufacturers
can not hide their heads in the sand on these types of case. Shields and guards
prevent this exact type of farming death. Most farm accidents and deaths involve
a dangerous or defectively designed products which becomes the basis of a
product liability and negligence lawsuit.
FARM ACCIDENT LEGAL
ACTIONS
If
you or a loved one have suffered a serious injury or death as a result of
entanglement with a PTO or other rotating shafts, farm tractor rollover or injured
while working on other farm equipment, then you may have a right to file a
lawsuit case against the responsible and negligent parties including the farm equipment
manufacturer and distributors involved. Call now and get your
questions answered. Talk to a Board Certified Personal Injury Trial Lawyer
FREE
CONFIDENTIAL CONSULTATION at 1-800-883-9858 or
1-800-468-4878 (Toll Free)

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