![]() ![]() |
![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Fatality Assessment and Control Evaluation (FACE) Program |
![]() |
Eighteen-Year-Old Sporting Goods Retail Store Worker Dies in a Fall From a Shelving Unit - Pennsylvania | ![]() |
| ||||||||||
SummaryAn 18-year-old male sporting-goods retail-store worker (the victim) died from a head injury after falling approximately 12 feet from the top of a shelving unit. When the incident happened, the victim was in the process of retrieving a large, heavy box from the top shelf of an H-frame shelving unit. A witness reported that as the victim leaned over and grasped the box by its nylon shipping bands, one of the bands broke and the victim fell backwards off the H-frame to the concrete floor. A registered nurse (RN) who was shopping in the store witnessed the incident, and rendered cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) to the victim. The store's manager called 911 and emergency rescue personnel and police arrived within minutes. The victim was life-flighted to a nearby trauma center where he died later that day from his injuries. NIOSH investigators concluded that, to prevent similar incidents, employers should:
IntroductionOn February 18, 2001, an 18-year-old retail store worker (the victim) died as a result of severe head injuries he sustained in a fall off an H-frame shelving unit. On March 2, 2001, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Division of Safety Research (DSR) was notified of the incident by the U.S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division, and initiated an investigation. On March 12, 2001, a DSR occupational safety and health specialist conducted a site visit to the retail store and met with representatives from both the Federal and State Wage and Hour agencies, with store employees, and with representatives from the retail store's corporate office. During that site visit, information was collected regarding the store's safety programs and employee training, work schedules, and operating procedures. Also, employees who were working or witnessed the incident were interviewed, and photographs of the H-frame and work locations were taken. The sporting goods retail store where this incident occurred is one of a chain of similar stores located throughout the eastern United States. The store has been in business at its current location since 1993. There were approximately 45 employees hired to split two shifts at this store. At the time of the incident, 13 workers and 2 managers were on duty. The majority of the store's employees were young, between the ages of 17 and 25 years old. It is the store's policy not to hire anyone under the age of 16. The victim had worked at the store for over a year during evenings and weekends. Safety and health training for employees was provided by the corporate office and coordinated by their District Loss Prevention Manager. The store provides training and certification in the proper operation and use of fall protection, operation of the electrically powered high-lift order picker, (referred to as the beeper), and materials handling. Employee certification is denoted by different colored name badges. It was a corporate policy that no one under the age of 18 be allowed to operate or be raised in the air by the beeper. This was the sporting goods retailer's first workplace fatality. Back to TopInvestigationThe sporting goods retail store where this incident occurred is located in a small strip mall, along with over a dozen other establishments. The store is approximately 100 feet wide and 150 feet long, with the ceiling approximately 20 feet high. The store has an open design and is subdivided into two departments, the soft- and hard-product departments. The soft-product department contains of items such as clothing, shoes, and other dress items or accessories. The hard-product department contains items such as weights, bikes, treadmills and many other hardware-type items. Workers are assigned to one area depending on their experience and seniority with more experienced workers assigned to the hard-product department, however; employees often help one another in other departments depending on how busy they are in their own departments. Store products are stored or displayed on a variety of different types of shelving units. Large, bulky or heavy items are stored on shelving units called H-frames. The H-frame is a heavy-gauge steel shelving unit in the shape of an "H", that is 12 feet high and 8 feet wide and can be butted together in 10 foot lengths to cover varying distances. Each H-frame can consist of multiple shelves depending on the configuration and size of the objects stored. Approximately half of the store is comprised of H-frame units that are arranged to form aisles. In order to remove items from the top shelves of the H-frames, the store utilizes an electrically powered, hand-controlled, vertical lift, referred to at this store as the beeper. The beeper has an attached work platform that is surrounded by a guardrail. One worker positions the beeper and operates the lift, while another worker stands on the platform and is raised to the level necessary to retrieve the item. The corporate office has a written and posted policy that requires the person being raised in the air to wear fall protection. Fall protection consists of a body harness that is tethered to a self-retracting lanyard which is secured to the upper frame of the work platform. The corporate office also requires that both the operator of the beeper, as well as the person being lifted, be trained and certified to use the equipment, including fall protection equipment. On the afternoon of the incident, the victim was assisting a customer and was requested to retrieve a box that contained an exercise bench from the top shelf of an H-frame. The box was 44 inches long by 30 inches wide by 6½ inches in depth and weighed 80.3 pounds. The box was shipped to the store with the contents secured by two &frac1;-inch nylon banding straps on the vertical dimension, and three ½-inch nylon banding straps on the horizontal dimension. The victim asked a 17 year old co-worker to assist him in retrieving the box. The co-worker positioned the beeper on the opposite side of the H-frame to where the box was located, and raised the victim up to the top shelf. The victim exited the beeper's platform and walked on the top shelf of the H-frame to retrieve the box. The exercise bench box was on the bottom of a stack of other products, and the victim had to move and relocate several other boxes in order to gain access to the particular box he was attempting to retrieve. As the victim was rearranging boxes, the co-worker was paged to the front of the store. As he was leaving, the victim asked him to request one of the store's managers to come back and assist him in retrieving the box. As the manager and the worker were walking back to where the victim was working, they both reported that they heard a "snap" and saw the victim fall backwards off the top of the H-frame shelf. The victim fell 12 feet, striking the back of his head on the concrete floor. The manager ran to the front of the store and called 911. A customer in the store, who was a registered nurse, administered CPR to the victim until emergency medical services (EMS) arrived at the site. After assessing the victim's condition, EMS called in a Life-Flight helicopter which transported the victim to a nearby trauma hospital. The victim died of head injuries received from the fall. Back to TopCause of DeathThe official cause of death was severe head trauma. Recommendations/DiscussionRecommendation #1: Employers should ensure that only properly trained personnel operate the hydraulic lifting equipment.Discussion: In this incident, neither the victim nor the co-worker who lifted the victim to the top of the H-frame was trained or certified by the store to operate the equipment. The store provides training and certification in the proper operation and use of fall protection, operation of the beeper, and materials handling. Employee certification is denoted by different colored name badges.
| ||||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||