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#1
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08-23-2013, 01:49 AM
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Woman Gets Hair Caught in Machine at Work
Company Forced to Pay £60,000 Fine After Admitting it was at Fault By Hugo Gye PUBLISHED: 08:53 EST, 17 January 2013 UPDATED: 07:25 EST, 19 January 2013 The horrific ordeal of a factory worker who suffered life-changing injuries after being dragged into a conveyor belt has been revealed in the statement she gave to a court hearing over the accident. Kelly Nield recalled how she was 'coughing up blood' as she felt herself pulled into the mechanism - but the factory floor was so busy that nobody noticed the accident. After being rushed to hospital, she feared her injuries would prove fatal, and asked doctors, "Am I going to die?".' Mainetti UK, the company which owned the factory on Deeside in North Wales, was yesterday fined over the incident, which left Miss Nield spending three months in hospital. Kelly Nield's hair can be seen tangled in the machine at Ellesmere Port, pictured below. Injuries: Kelly Nield had her hair ripped out while working at a factory; she is pictured below before the accident. The firm was forced to pay out £60,000 and meet costs of £21,600 after being faced with four charges brought by the Health and Safety Executive relating to the 'horrific accident' which took place in April, 2009. In a statement, Miss Nield, now 24, revealed the full horror of the incident. 'I was in total shock so I couldn't feel much pain to begin with but I was panic-stricken,' she said. 'I knew I was in trouble. I started banging on the belt and shouting for help.' 'I was coughing up blood and thinking, "Oh my god, oh my god." It all happened so fast. I could see my finger dangling there and I couldn't breathe, but the factory was noisy and nobody had seen it happen. 'Then my friend spotted me and ran to press the main off button, but as I watched her it felt like it all happened in slow motion. A workman raced over and found some scissors to cut the scarf but my throat immediately began to swell up and I couldn't speak. 'I was very gurgly and I could hardly breathe. I remember feeling very weak and wanting to sleep. Later, I kept asking doctors, "Am I going to die?"' Factory: Miss Nield was working at the Mainetti facility on Deeside in North Wales, pictured below. Miss Nield was working at the coat hanger factory for £7 an hour when she leaned forward to free some hangers which were caught in the machinery. Her scarf became entangled in the cogs of a conveyor belt, which then dragged in her hair. As she tried to free herself, her hand was caught in the machine, trapping her little finger and almost severing it. After the accident, she sustained serious injuries to the neck and throat, lost much of her hair and fractured her finger. Miss Nield was taken to the Countess of Chester Hospital, where she remained for three months while undergoing a series of operations. She now has disabling injuries and has been fitted with a stomach peg to feed her liquids because she is unable to swallow, as well as suffering from flashbacks and trauma, prosecutor Simon Parrington told Mold Crown Court. Responsible: Mainetti UK, photo below, has admitted its culpability for the horrific incident in 2009 Culpable: Representatives of Mainetti, pictured below, admitted their responsibility for Miss Nield's injuries. Judge Niclas Parry said that it was 'an accident waiting to happen', adding that Miss Nield's horrific injuries were entirely foreseeable due to Mainetti's lax safety standards. Mr Parrington said that the company failed to provide proper instruction, prevent access to dangerous parts of the machinery or install an emergency stop button on the factory floor. Miss Nield, an agency worker, had watched a 15-minute training DVD, but was not warned about the dangers of working with conveyors before she started doing so. Her accident came on the first day she worked on the conveyor line, when she 'had to rely on her fellow workers to show her what to do', according to Mr Parrington. Simon Antrobus, defending, said that the company officials wished to apologise to Miss Nield and added that the firm accepted full responsibility for her ordeal. 'It does not seek to evade responsibility or pass the buck,' he said. He claimed the accident was a result of workers failing to follow the company's own safety procedures, but admitted that managers should have rectified this failure. Mr Antrobus added that Mainetti had a good safety record and had recently moved to a new factory in North Wales with updated procedures. He also pointed to the company's charity work and good reputation among its own employees as mitigation. Pictured: Clump of factory worker's hair left in machinery after being scalped by conveyor belt when she was dragged in by her scarf Kelly Nield was dragged into machinery at factory in North Wales in 2009 Here is the thread about the American woman: http://www.documentingreality.com/fo...cident-109400/ |
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#2
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08-23-2013, 05:46 AM
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Re: Woman Gets Hair Caught in Machine at Work
i wonder what she was thinking of as she was being pulled into the machine, thats what you would call a bad hair day |
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#5
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08-23-2013, 06:53 PM
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Re: Woman Gets Hair Caught in Machine at Work
I don't know why it is called common sense. I would never wear a scarf and have my hair down, if it would grow that long, by any kind of machinery :( I had posted another woman about a year ago, who had her hair and top of scalp removed the same way. I did a search and it wasn't the same one. The video showed her with a big turban bandage wrapped around her head, but, she was talking to the news people. I don't recall her name to check on her. It was her first day on the job, but, I'm almost positive, she was in the US. |
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#9
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08-24-2013, 02:33 AM
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Re: Woman Gets Hair Caught in Machine at Work
Here is the thread on the American woman. She was scalped! While searching for her, I saw several other, "woman caught in machine," threads. http://www.documentingreality.com/fo...cident-109400/ |