Hospital fined after maintenance worker receives serious burns

Published: 27-May-2015

Kettering General Hospital NHS Foundation Trust in court after employee suffers burns while stripping down steam boiler


Kettering General Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (KGH), has been fined after an employee received serious burns while stripping down a steam boiler.

On 5 November 2012 a maintenance worker at KGH was stripping down a steam boiler for periodic examination when he received serious steam burn injuries to the lower half of his body.

The worker received his injuries while removing the crown valve from one of the steam boilers. The system only had a single point of isolation, instead of two, and this single point did not prevent steam leaking back into the section of the system he was working on.

The Court heard KGH had no system for assessing and controlling risks their employees were exposed to. The trust did not know what training their maintenance employees had received and they were not under suitable supervision while working there.

The trust, of Rothwell Road, Kettering, appeared at Northampton Magistrates’ Court and was fined £7,000 with full costs of £1,926 and a victim surcharge of £15 after pleading guilty to breaching Section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974.

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