Are escalators and moving walkways safe?
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Are escalators and moving walkways safe?

A moving walkway speeds a pilot between terminals at at LaGuardia Airport in Queens, New York City on Dec 5, 2014. A woman at Don Mueang International Airport in Bangkok recently lost part of her leg after it was caught in a moving walkway, but such injuries on the walkways, and escalators, are extremely rare. (Karsten Moran/The New York Times)
A moving walkway speeds a pilot between terminals at at LaGuardia Airport in Queens, New York City on Dec 5, 2014. A woman at Don Mueang International Airport in Bangkok recently lost part of her leg after it was caught in a moving walkway, but such injuries on the walkways, and escalators, are extremely rare. (Karsten Moran/The New York Times)

An airline passenger had part of her leg amputated this past week after an accident on a moving airport walkway in Bangkok, authorities said.

The accident, involving a 57-year-old woman, occurred Thursday in the domestic terminal of Don Mueang International, the older and smaller of two major airports that serve Bangkok, the capital.

It’s unclear precisely what happened. Local news media initially reported that the woman’s leg had been pulled into the walkway’s machinery after she tripped on her suitcase. But her family said Saturday that she had been walking normally when part of the walkway collapsed.

What’s clear is that her leg was amputated up to the kneecap after the accident. Thai authorities are now trying to determine if the accident resulted from human error or equipment malfunction.

Walkways: widely used and seldom feared

Such walkways are known as “moving walks” to government regulators and construction companies in the US and "travellators" elsewhere. Moving walks are often talked about in the same breath as escalators because they use similar technology and move at about the same speed — generally 100 feet per minute, or about 2kph.

The main difference is incline. An escalator sits at about 30 degrees, but a moving walk’s incline is typically no more than one-tenth of that. Many moving walks are flat.

Escalators and moving walks ease the movement of billions of people through airports, shopping malls and other public spaces each year. The National Elevator Industry, an industry group in the United States, estimates that about 105 billion passengers ride escalators annually — the world’s population, multiplied by 13 — in the United States alone.

Escalators and moving walks are widely seen as very safe. But, like virtually any form of public transportation, they occasionally malfunction.

In Australia, for example, inspectors in the state of Queensland found two recent examples of moving walks that were operating with a missing pallet, the technical term for the metal slats that separate passengers from the whirring machinery below.

And in Thailand, a passenger at Don Mueang International Airport reported losing a shoe to the machinery of a moving walk in 2019, Thai news media outlets reported this past week.

How likely is an accident on an airport walkway?

Data for the safety of moving walks is scarce. But if we go by escalator-safety data, the answer is “not very”.

An average of 2 deaths per year in the United States involve escalators, lower than the figure for lifts, according to a 2013 review of US government data by the Center for Construction Research and Training, a nonprofit group in Maryland.

The risk of injury is higher: About 10,000 escalator-related injuries result in a trip to the emergency room in the United States each year. But even that figure is exceedingly small if you consider the sheer volume of escalator and moving walk trips that people take every day.

The moving walk where the accident occurred this past week had been used at Don Mueang International since 1996, the airport’s director, Karant Thanakuljeerapat, told reporters.

Don Mueang carried more than 13 million domestic passengers last year, and nearly twice as many in the years immediately before the coronavirus pandemic, according to government data. So, over nearly three decades, a moving walk there could have carried many tens of millions of passengers.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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