Irish Daily Mail

Pensioner was crushed by a falling silage bale

Farmer, 75, died ten days after suffering major injuries

- By Seán McCárthaig­h

AN ELDERLY farmer died after being knocked over by a bale of hay which came loose while being stacked on his farm five years ago, an inquest has heard.

Father-of-four Peter Osborne, 75, died at Tallaght University Hospital on July 26, 2019, ten days after suffering major brain, spinal and pelvic injuries during the incident.

The inquest heard that seven people have been killed in a tenyear period in the country as a result of accidents involving bales of hay and silage.

The deceased’s eldest son, Patrick Osborne, was helping his father, from Flowery, Ballabony, Ardee, Co. Louth, on the farm at the time of the incident.

He told Dublin District Coroner’s Court yesterday that he had been using a tractor and loader to stack the bales while his father was supervisin­g the operation.

Mr Osborne said that he was placing the bales in stacks of four in the shed when some of them became loose with one bouncing on the ground before knocking his father over.

He estimated each bale weighed between 300 and 400 kilograms.

Mr Osborne said his father was knocked over flat on his back after the bale hit him in the chest and he was rendered unconsciou­s.

He recalled that his father regained consciousn­ess after about five minutes and wanted to sit up but was informed he should not be moved.

The inquest heard Mr Osborne was brought by ambulance to Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Drogheda but was later transferre­d to Tallaght University Hospital on July 19, 2019, due to concerns about injuries to his pelvis.

The deceased’s son said his father was originally doing well following surgery to his pelvis and was expected to be moved out of an intensive care unit when his condition suddenly deteriorat­ed, to the shock of both his family and hospital staff.

‘Something doesn’t add up. We thought we were on the pig’s back and would be able to get him home,’ said Mr Osborne.

He said his family were informed on the morning of July 26, 2019, that his father was seriously ill and not going to survive. He died later that day at 3.30pm.

Medical records showed the deceased had suffered fractures to his neck, back and pelvis as well as internal bleeding in the brain and pelvic area.

A pathologis­t, Kevin O’Hare, said a postmortem showed Mr Osborne had died from multiple traumatic injuries and had also developed sepsis and multiple organ failure.

Questioned by the coroner, Aisling Gannon, Dr O’Hare said he believed Mr Osborne’s death was due to the ‘cumulative effect’ of the various injuries rather than any single one.

An inspector with the Health and Safety Authority (HSA), Catriona Glancy, said it was well known in the farming community that freshly baled hay is prone to move and shift quite suddenly.

‘It is a well-known hazard,’ said Ms Glancy.

She also said that the HSA had issued guidelines in September 2015 that round bales of hay should only be stacked to a maximum height of three bales and to a maximum of two for bales that are not very soft or dense.

However, Ms Glancy said the guidelines had been updated in November 2020 as a result of the circumstan­ces in Mr Osborne’s case to stress the importance of carrying out a risk assessment before stacking bales on farms.

The inquest heard that an investigat­ion by the HSE of the fatal incident involving Mr Osborne directed that no criminal prosecutio­n should arise.

Ms Glancy noted the deceased was the party responsibl­e for work carried out on his farm.

She also highlighte­d that there have been seven fatalities in the country involving bales of either hay or silage between 2011 and 2020, including four specifical­ly due to being struck by a moving bale.

The jury of five females and one male returned a verdict of accidental death.

The inquest jury also recommende­d the HSA provide more informatio­n to farmers regarding health and safety on all aspects of farming activities ‘in every possible way’.

Sepsis and multiple organ failure

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