FACTS
Causes of PTO accidents.
- Many tractors, especially older models, lack PTO shields or have damaged or ineffective shields.
- PTOs may be engaged without operator input. If a PTO shaft is attached to a moving tractor, for example, but is not also attached to an accessory, the rotating shaft may catch on clothing, limbs or hair, dismembering, scalping or mutilating them.
- Some farm equipment must be running to adjust or correct malfunctions. Since PTO shafts rotate when the equipment they are attached to is operated, one may be exposed to the rapidly spinning PTO shaft while examining their equipment.
- Work practices such as clearing crop plugs may expose operators to PTO shafts.
- Defective PTO shafts can disconnect from the machinery they are attached to. If so, they may swing and/or break off, striking anyone within range.
- PTO shafts are some of the most dangerous pieces of farm equipment, resulting in many accidents and deaths.
- In just one second, a PTO can wrap an arm or leg around a shaft nine times. The PTO shaft can rotate at a speed of nine times per second.
STATS
- Statistics from the federal government estimate 40 fatalities and 150 amputations and countless other serious injuries such as broken bones, scalpings, etc. occur each year due to entanglement.
- During a 12-year period of 739 patients admitted to a Wisconsin referral Trauma Centre with injuries incurred whilst farming, the injury mechanisms in 7% of cases involved a power take-off (PTO) shaft. Illustrative of the severity of this injury was the fact that three of the 16 deaths in the series occurred as a result of this device.
- Of the 47 accidents involving a PTO device in the Wisconsin trial, 32 resulted in upper limb trauma; there were six major amputations; 10 patients sustained serious injury to the branchial plexus and peripheral nerves; one patient had a severe degloving urogenital injury; and there were 3 near-strangulations.
- Additionally 20 patients had residual significant permanent disability. In this paper, five case summaries of PTO injuries collected from the admissions to two West Dublin City hospitals over a 2-year period are presented and the injury precipitating factors are explored in relation to this type of injury.
- According to the Farm Injury Resource Center, Power Take-Off (PTO) injuries are common on a farm, with most occurring when clothing and/or limbs are entangled in the rotating PTO shaft.
New Safety Talks
New Safety Talks
New eLearning
Vicky Pickford2024-07-08T21:49:16+00:00