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Elevator Safety: After Deaths, Should We Be Worried About Riding In Elevators?

Elevator Safety

First Posted: 12/15/2011 5:05 pm Updated: 12/15/2011 9:41 pm

Elevators have been in the news a lot more than usual over the last couple of weeks -- and not for positive reasons.

A woman was crushed to death last week at California State University Long Beach after trying to climb out of her elevator car when it got stuck. The elevator, which weighed 2,000 pounds, dropped down on top of her as she was climbing out, the Los Angeles Times reported.

And just yesterday, a New York City woman was crushed to death after the elevator doors closed in on her leg as she stepped into the elevator car, dragging her upward between the shaft wall and the elevator car, the Associated Press reported.

After freak accidents like these, it wouldn't be surprising if more people were afraid to ride in elevators, ABC News reported. About 2 percent of the U.S. population have a "situational" phobia -- which includes riding in elevators and claustrophobia.

So the obvious question is: Are elevators safe? And what should we do -- or not do -- to keep our elevator-riding experience a safe one?

North Carolina-based elevator consultant and expert Charles A. Buckman said that people shouldn't be afraid to ride in elevators because they are extremely safe.

"Riding in an elevator is safer than riding in a New York cab, for example," Buckman told HuffPost. "Elevators are the safest mode of transportation in the country, without exception."

ConsumerWatch.com reported that elevator accidents that result in death are very rare -- about 27 a year -- though injuries from elevator accidents affect about 10,200 people a year.

However, the LA Times calculated that elevators make about 18 billion trips a year, so the fatality rate from elevator accidents works out to about 0.00000015 percent per trip.

Life's Little Mysteries explained what exactly it is about elevators that makes them so safe:

A 2009 report by Occupational Health & Safety attributes the rarity of elevator fatalities to "intricate, redundant, and regulated safety features built into every elevator." Elevators typically have four to eight times as many cables holding them up than they actually need, and they also have automatic braking systems near the top and bottom of the shaft, backed up by electromagnetic brakes. Finally, "at the bottom of the shaft is a heavy-duty shock absorber system designed to save passengers if all else fails," the report stated.

HuffPost asked Buckman some common questions and concerns regarding elevator safety:

Is it safe to hold the doors open?

In short, yes, Buckman said, because modern elevators are built to have their doors held open.

What happens if you go over the weight or people limit in an elevator?

The elevator quotas are simply a "general guesstimation of how many people should be on the elevator," Buckman said -- more an issue of how many people can safely and comfortably fit in the elevator, versus any possible risk that comes from squeezing an extra couple people in the car.

What's the best thing to do if an elevator gets stuck?

According to National Elevators Industry Inc., you should not try to climb out of the elevator if it gets stuck. (Re: The woman who died in the elevator incident at Cal State Long Beach.)

Buckman said that people should use the emergency phone or call button installed in every elevator car to ask for help, and then follow whatever instructions are given. Every elevator car is supposed to have an emergency call button or phone, even older elevators.

National Elevators Industry Inc. recommends staying calm and not panicking over lack of air -- there is plenty of air in the car to breathe.

Is it dangerous to jump in an elevator?

No, nothing "would happen as a consequence of jumping," Buckman said.

How often are elevators inspected?

In most parts of the country, elevators are inspected every year as part of conformance to the national elevator safety code, Buckman said. There will always be an inspection notice or certificate to prove the inspection of the elevator.

Related on HuffPost:

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Elevators have been in the news a lot more than usual over the last couple of weeks -- and not for positive reasons. A woman was crushed to death last week at California State University Long Beac...
Elevators have been in the news a lot more than usual over the last couple of weeks -- and not for positive reasons. A woman was crushed to death last week at California State University Long Beac...
 
 
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3 hours ago ( 4:27 PM)
I've worked on elevators and escalators for 32 years, with company's pushing harder and harder, loading up techs with more and more work, pushing to do more with less maintenance and more and more is getting over looked. The NTSB should be over seeing this work and making sure its done and not just out making numbers....and I'm talking about the major company's
01:14 PM on 04/13/2012
ok maybe if it's a situation where you need to get to the bathroom ASAP and you have go upstairs to get to it they can be a nusense
10:36 AM on 03/21/2012
elevators are more partical in some cases than stairs and so far i've had no experincess that would lead me to believe they're dangerous
07:52 AM on 12/20/2011
In NYC elevators are inspected by... the elevator repair company! It's a joke. There is no city oversight
07:51 AM on 12/20/2011
That photo is grossing me out! Elevator buttons are like petri dishes -- best to push the buttons with a knuckle, rather than your fingertip
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
01:34 PM on 12/19/2011
They are if you use them all the time instead of the stairs.

Then you turn into a big fat blob, get heart disease and die young.
01:47 PM on 12/18/2011
I'm so sorry for everyone who was involved in these tragedies. I used to be petrified of elevators, I'm sure this will make me enter an elevator more quickly. There was a similar tragedy that happened in the NY area in the 80s where a woman fell into an escalator. Since then I've always straddled two steps while taking an escalator. I know it's not rational, but it's my natural reaction. I'm not going to stop taking either.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IvyRedhead Hoffart
enjoying life in a messed-up world
12:58 AM on 12/18/2011
Considering that the elevator in one of the buildings on my college campus started smoking last Friday while a girl was inside it (she got out, thank goodness), I really don't trust that elevators are inspected often enough.
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nanaofmysky
Character consists of what you do on 3rd,4th try
07:47 PM on 12/17/2011
I hate elavatores.There are times that I have no choice but to use them. I have health problems so if it is more than a couple of floors I take it. I always have a bottle of water, some kind of fruit or candy bar and gum, just in case. I've been stuck in one do not want to be again.
05:27 PM on 12/17/2011
To be honest, I think it's best to walk up the stair and get some exercise. It doesn't really matter if they are safe, safety is all about the user, it's safe if you are. But seriously, I think taking stairs instead of elevators is much much healthier!

http://www.lovingfit.com
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04:38 PM on 12/17/2011
Aren't elevators supposed to have a system where a person accidentaly has a body part stuck in the elevator door, the door automatically senses that and opens? It doesn't seem that the elivator that the womans' foot got stuck in hadsouch a safety plan.
03:39 PM on 12/17/2011
These stories sound like scenes in Final Destination. Freaky!
photo
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YankeeCanuck
dog
02:54 PM on 12/17/2011
We must STOP the elevator before it kills again!
02:41 PM on 12/17/2011
It's time to ban elevators
12:14 PM on 12/17/2011
I get annoyed with this style of journalism...post a headline asking a question about the safety of a given thing when there actually is no meaningful question, as the article goes on to say. But, taking advantage of the shock value of the topic b/c of a couple of isolated tragedies combined with the known fact that a substantial portion of news readers never make it past the headline or first paragraph, the headline serves the purpose of questioning something that never should be questioned, ie, it plants the thought in peoples' heads that they should add, despite evidence to the contrary in each case, elevators to the "be scared of" list of like being a violent crime victim (which are at historic lows). And this is done knowingly b/c the author obviously knows the answer to her "question" posed in the headline as evidenced by her answering it in the article.

We actually live in the safest, healthiest, cleanest, and most peaceful time in human history on average and yet you would never know it.