Why it matters to you
It's best you stick with the primary purpose of your gadgets rather than using them for something they're not designed for.
If you decide to splash out on a particular type of foot massage machine anytime soon, be sure to use it only on your feet and keep it well away from all other parts of your body.
An elderly woman in Japanโs northern island of Hokkaido paid with her life last week when she apparently tried to use a foot massager to relieve tension in her neck and shoulders.
Itโs thought that the 77-year-old Japanese woman suffocated when her clothes became caught in the machineโs electric-powered rollers, which were exposed as the deviceโs cover had at some point been removed. Her relatives found her lying unconscious on the floor of her home but she died a short while later, the Mainichi Shimbun reported.
Hokkaido Police
Made by Saitama-based Matoba, the massage machine has been in the news before for all the wrong reasons. Three separate fatal accidents similar to last weekโs tragedy were reported back in 2008, prompting the firm to accompany its product with a note warning owners not to remove the cover, and to use it with feet only.
But the device hit the headlines again three years ago when yet another person in Japan died after apparently having used it incorrectly.
The warnings are evidently failing to deter some people from removing the cover and applying the machine to their neck and shoulders, a particularly dangerous act as it appears the foot massager has no mechanism to make it automatically stop should fabrics or other items become entangled in the rollers.
Gadget disasters
Serious accidents involving gadgets are thankfully rare, but from time to time they do hit the headlines. A London man, for example, was fatally electrocuted in 2016 after attempting to charge his smartphone while taking a bath, and in 2015 a South Korean woman had a scary run-in with a robot vacuum.
She had fallen asleep on the floor when her autonomous vacuum trundled over and tried to sweep her up. Unfortunately for the woman, her long hair got caught up in the machineโs rotating brushes, resulting in a rude awakening that led to a โdesperate rescue requestโ to first responders, who arrived in time to free her from the machineโs clutches before any serious injury occurred.
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It's best you stick with the primary purpose of your gadgets rather than using them for something they're not designed for.
If you decide to splash out on a particular type of foot massage machine anytime soon, be sure to use it only on your feet and keep it well away from all other parts of your body.
An elderly woman in Japanโs northern island of Hokkaido paid with her life last week when she apparently tried to use a foot massager to relieve tension in her neck and shoulders.
Itโs thought that the 77-year-old Japanese woman suffocated when her clothes became caught in the machineโs electric-powered rollers, which were exposed as the deviceโs cover had at some point been removed. Her relatives found her lying unconscious on the floor of her home but she died a short while later, the Mainichi Shimbun reported.
Hokkaido Police
Made by Saitama-based Matoba, the massage machine has been in the news before for all the wrong reasons. Three separate fatal accidents similar to last weekโs tragedy were reported back in 2008, prompting the firm to accompany its product with a note warning owners not to remove the cover, and to use it with feet only.
But the device hit the headlines again three years ago when yet another person in Japan died after apparently having used it incorrectly.
The warnings are evidently failing to deter some people from removing the cover and applying the machine to their neck and shoulders, a particularly dangerous act as it appears the foot massager has no mechanism to make it automatically stop should fabrics or other items become entangled in the rollers.
Gadget disasters
Serious accidents involving gadgets are thankfully rare, but from time to time they do hit the headlines. A London man, for example, was fatally electrocuted in 2016 after attempting to charge his smartphone while taking a bath, and in 2015 a South Korean woman had a scary run-in with a robot vacuum.
She had fallen asleep on the floor when her autonomous vacuum trundled over and tried to sweep her up. Unfortunately for the woman, her long hair got caught up in the machineโs rotating brushes, resulting in a rude awakening that led to a โdesperate rescue requestโ to first responders, who arrived in time to free her from the machineโs clutches before any serious injury occurred.
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