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Toddler injured on escalator resulting in trip to A&E

126 replies

IlanaK · 19/05/2011 21:22

i live in London so travel very regularly on the tube with my three boys, the youngest is 2 (3 at the end of July). I don't use a pushchair for him as he started walking everywhere about 6 months ago. We are on the tube most days and I always hold his hand on the escalators and stand behind him in case he falls backwards (on the up ones) so I do consider that I supervise him to an adequate standard.

On Wednesday, midway up an escalator, he started screaming and twisted to face me and fell to a sitting position on the step. I looked down and could see a black line across his shoe. I picked him up and at the top of the escalator moved to some seats so I could sit him down and see what happened. He was very very distressed so wouldn't talk to me. I took off his shoe and sock and he had quite severe red marks across the knuckles of all his toes. He was crying so hard. I managed to get a few words out of him and it appeared he had put his foot in the brush that is at the side of the escalator. It obviously got stuck in a gap underneath and dragged.

I carried him up the next escalator to the barriers and told a member of staff what happened. he took us to a supervisor office and I told them and they logged my details. They offered to call an ambulance but at that point I just wanted to get him to my mother's place where we had been headed which was just outside the station. I carried him all the way there with him whimpering the whole way. I sat with him on my lap and he fell asleep within ten minutes. He does not sleep during the day. I think he was just so distressed that he needed to block it out. When he woke, he was still distressed and refused to put any weight on the foot. So I ended up taking him to A&E. They xrayed the foot and said it was not broken but he had a severe crush injury to the soft tissue and that he would limp for a while.

He has still not put his foot on the ground over 24 hours later. If you touch the foot underneath (which is very swollen) he gets very upset. If he tries to stand, he cries and buckles to the floor. I today finally examined his shoe that he was wearing at the time (it had sort of been chucked to the side and forgotten with one thing and another) and there is a deep gash that goes almost through the shoe. It is a croc shoe. So if he had been wearing sandals or less thick shoes, his toes would have been very badly cut.

My husband is furious about it all. He feels that if there is a gap that a child could get their foot stuck and crushed in, there is a design flaw in the escalators and they are not safe. He wants to contact a solicitor.

What would you do?

OP posts:
megapixels · 19/05/2011 22:01

Injuries such as what happen to your son have happened before. Here it is documented on Snopes. Just chalk it up to experience and be careful with him next time.

IlanaK · 19/05/2011 22:02

Thanks for your input everyone. I grew up in the US so do not remember any advertising campaign about escalators. I really was truly unaware of the danger of the brush. I am very aware of the danger at the top of escalators and always hold my toddlers hand very firmly, almost lifting him off at the end for fear of him getting stuck. I do not accept the crocs issue. In fact, i am so glad he was wearing them as the toe is totally enclosed (his ones have none of the holes you see more commonly). And they are very thick at the front. If he had been wearing any other type of shoe (including any type of sandal which I would consider perfectly good for walking), his toes would have been sliced. There are certainly no yellow lines on the escalator we were on. No lines of any kind. As to whether there is a sign, I am not sure and would have to check.

OP posts:
megapixels · 19/05/2011 22:04

The Snopes link I posted especially mentions Crocs. Seems to be a popular culprit in this sort of thing.

thisisyesterday · 19/05/2011 22:05

crocs risk

it's real. in various places they've been banned (i think in some big airports) after the number of injuries went up dramatically. it's partly because the soft plastic can easily get trapped and is difficult to get out again.

silverfrog · 19/05/2011 22:05
thisisyesterday · 19/05/2011 22:06

if you google "crocs escalators" you will find hundreds of pages coming up warning about them

there are groups of people in the US suing the manufacturers too, I believe

hulababy · 19/05/2011 22:07

What would you expect to get out of instructing a solicitor?

Would it to just draw attention to the accident and your DS's injury? If that is the case, write a letter yourself and save yourself some money. Write a letter with all the details, when, when and how. Explaint hat there was no yellow lines and advise some form of visual warning, such as the lines, would be adviseable and that you hope they will consider it.

Or is it for compensation? Because if that is the case it is unlikely you would get very much at all, maybe just the price of the shoes to be repaired at most. Most likely, nothing.

MumblingRagDoll · 19/05/2011 22:10

Why are people saying it was an accient as if that's all there is to this?? The point it the GAP is to big! If a childs foor fits in it then it s a danger!

No argument. There should not be a gap big eough to mangle feet.

IlanaK · 19/05/2011 22:11

Mumblingragdoll - that is exactly what my husband is angry about.

OP posts:
MumblingRagDoll · 19/05/2011 22:11

I grew up in the UK and I also never knew the brushes were a danger!

thisisyesterday · 19/05/2011 22:13

well then how would the escalator work Hmm

don't be so ridiculous. the brush is there to close the gap and still allow the thing to actually work

silverfrog · 19/05/2011 22:13

there are signs by each escalator - they will be there somewhere. as Pagwatch linked ot earlier. usually in pictures and words - either on the wall next to the escalator, on a sign in front of it, or on the side of the escalator as you get on.

hulababy · 19/05/2011 22:13

Don't all esculators have the brushes and the gap? I am pretty sure they do. Putting your foot anyway near moving machinery parts - which is what is happening at the edge of an esculator after all - is always going to be a risk.

stealthsquiggle · 19/05/2011 22:15

MumblingRagDoll - um - because there has to be or the escalator wouldn't work. That is why they are plastered with warning signs (and yes, I know, if you use them every day you filter the signs out, but they are there). If you could make an escalator work without gaps, it would have been done by now. You can't - the brushes are there to keep things out of aforementioned gaps - if small children poke their feet into/under the brushes, accidents happen.

stealthsquiggle · 19/05/2011 22:15

oops - x-post.

thisisyesterday · 19/05/2011 22:18

still am looking forward to Ilanak and Mumblingragdoll's new campaign to get escalators banned

we should start banning everything anyone could possibly hurt themselves on I reckon

i mean look at knives... big sharp blades, they don't even have a cover you could just cut yourself on one. ought to do something about them Hmm

MumblingRagDoll · 19/05/2011 22:19

No...there doesn't HAVE to be....it's just that they have not paid for a better version to be installed or paid anyone to research a better way.

So UM away stealth

As for warning signs....what if you are foreign? Or cannot read? There needs to be a visual clue to warn people....a red line....a barrier...something.

Happygomummy · 19/05/2011 22:19

Ha ha mumblingragdoll!! you really have no clue about how engineering works, do you??

Perhaps we should design cars that don't go fast enough to kill, but can still get us from A to B in the same time they used too?

Or make sure pavements are soft and squidgy and fluffy so that if we trip up it doesn't hurt, yet at the same time are solid and firm so that we can actually walk on them.

You don't HAVE to use them. If they frighten you, don't. And if you do, look after your children properly.

There is no substitute for parental responsibility.

Sirzy · 19/05/2011 22:19

Sometimes risks in life cant all be removed and occassionally people do have to take responsibility for themselves and there children.

This "nothing is an accident" culture really pisses me off tbh. Accidents do happen, they are a part of life and they make you more careful next time!

MollysChamber · 19/05/2011 22:20

It was an accident. Accidents happen.

I'm not sure what you would expect to achieve from contacting a solicitor. I wouldn't.

MarisCrane · 19/05/2011 22:20

Crocs have been involved in many many accidents on escalators; I have investigated some myself at work. It's a shame people aren't being made more aware of the risks.

MumblingRagDoll · 19/05/2011 22:20

thisisesterday When did I sayI wanted esalators banned? Hmm Oh that's right! I never!

As I said....I never knew those brushes hid anything dangerous...and I am English and I can read....so more needs to be done to alert people.

Sirzy · 19/05/2011 22:21

I want to see these designs for escalators without a gap! I am sure you could make a fortune!

And the signs generally do have pictures on to. But there again
I have used escalators abroad without a problem anyway as most of the things on the warning signs are obvious common sense anyway.

MumblingRagDoll · 19/05/2011 22:21

Happygomummy Ha ha You really have no idea how thinking outside the box works do you?

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