Engineer Killed by Deadly Electric Shock Left Undiscovered

Engineer Killed by Deadly Electric Shock Left Undiscovered

An engineer who died after a deadly electric shock from a faulty machine was left undiscovered by work mates for over an hour on a factory floor.

Andy Meade, 55, was rushed to Darent Valley Hospital after colleagues found him unresponsive in the warehouse in Gravesend. It was believed the โ€˜healthyโ€™ father of four had suffered a sudden heart attack.

It wasnโ€™t until a week after his death that distraught wife Paula, 55, was told that her husband had in fact died from a catastrophic electric shock.

Paula, from Walderslade in Kent, said: โ€œI was told it was a heart attack, but he was a healthy man with no history of heart problems.

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t until his colleagues watched the CCTV, and the police investigated fully, that they realised he had been electrocuted.

โ€œIt took a week for me to find out exactly how my husband had lost his life.โ€

The father of four was servicing a faulty electrical air compressor, which had not been serviced for over a decade, when he was electrocuted despite the machine being โ€˜switched offโ€™ from all electrical current.

Now, Paula is calling for safety checks of similar machines to be tightened.

Currently, legislation calls for electrical checks to be carried out within a โ€˜reasonableโ€™ timeframe, leaving the time scale, she says, open to interpretation.

Paula said: โ€œMy life was in colour before his death, but now itโ€™s in black and white. That machine had not been electrically safety checked in 11 years. I donโ€™t have a health and safety qualification, but that doesnโ€™t seem right to me. Surely we need more timely checks to keep our workers safe?โ€

Andy was completing the routine quarterly service for contracting firm Logistex in December 2017 at Kimberley Clarkโ€™s distribution centre, the company which owns Kleenex and Huggies.

The engineer of 30 years believed power had been cut to the machine. But, a fault meant a metal plate was permanently live at 240 volts, leaving him exposed to a deadly quantity of electricity. Paula said: โ€œThis was an accident waiting to happen.โ€

Shortly after Andy was found in a critical condition, Paula received a call saying he had suffered a suspected heart attack.

Paula said she was left fearing the worst as she listened to medical staff working to resuscitate her husband. She said: โ€œI just heard them counting time and banging and calling his name. They came out and said it wasnโ€™t looking good.

โ€œFive minutes later, they came back and I knew what they were going tell me. It was Andyโ€™s job to cover other staff who were off sick or away on holiday, which meant that service would normally have been someone elseโ€™s workload. That is hard to accept.โ€

It has since been revealed that, on top of not being tested since it was installed in 2006, the machine had been modified a number of times over 11 years.

It is believed these changes were not conducted to the correct standard or under the correct professional supervision.

In January 2019, a Maidstone coroner ruled Andyโ€™s death an accident. The Health and Safety Executive are investigating.

Tracey Benson, Employers Liability Lawyer from Slater and Gordon, who is representing Paula and her family, said: โ€œLogistex failed to have the compressor tested since its installation in 2006.

โ€œThere were also modifications to the compressor which were performed with no planning or professional oversight, resulting in the machine becoming a death trap for any worker that was due to service it.

โ€œIn my opinion, the will have breached a host of regulatory codes and, therefore, will have to answer some tough questions from the HSE, potentially resulting in a conviction.โ€

Paula was also distressed to discover there was no defibrillator on site, something she believes may have helped play a role in saving Andyโ€™s life. Paula adds: โ€œThere should be a defibrillator in every place of work, but especially places where workers could be exposed to potentially fatal injuries.

โ€œIt could be a simple addition to a workplace that could save a life. โ€œI also think all staff in roles like Andyโ€™s should carry radios which automatically call for assistance when a person is lying down.

โ€œWhen Andy was electrocuted, there was only one radio available for two engineers. He wasnโ€™t wearing one and was left lying there for over an hour.โ€

Paula and Andy had been looking forward to their future together after their four children had grown up and left home. A future, Paula says, has now been robbed of them.

โ€œWe have been cheated of our life together. He was cheated and I have been cheated. My world stopped turning the day he died.

โ€œWe were like the other half of each other. I always came up with the ideas and he would do them. It was fun; we always had each otherโ€™s backs.

โ€œOnce our children had grown up, we had the time to rediscover who we were as a couple and we were looking forward to spending the rest of our lives together.โ€

The couple had purchased a campervan, which they used to travel the UK in the summer before Andyโ€™s death, and they planned to take it across Europe in 2018.

Paula has now sold the campervan as she canโ€™t bring herself to travel without her husband.

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