Death by vending machine

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Full size vending machines can weigh over 1,000 pounds (450 kg),[1] creating a risk of serious injury or death if tilted until they fall over.

Vending machines being rocked or tilted have been known to cause serious injury and death when the heavy machines fall over.

Users may rock machines in order to obtain free products, release stuck products, or obtain change.[2] The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission found in a 1995 study that at least 37 deaths and 113 injuries had occurred due to falling vending machines from 1978 to 1995.[1][3] This resulted in a voluntary campaign from vending machine manufacturers to warn that rocking or tilting the machines could cause serious injury or death, including placing warning labels on all machines.[3][4][5] The U.S. military started putting warning labels on machines in the late 1980s after a number of incidents on military installations.[6]

The vast majority of injuries and deaths have happened to men.[7][8][9]

The argument that death by a vending machine is more likely to occur than something like winning the Powerball lottery, has drawn more attention to these unusual deaths.[10] One 2012 report states that the odds of winning Powerball are 1 in 175 million, versus 1 in 112 million of getting killed by a vending machine.[11] A similar comparison is often drawn to emphasize the rare occurrence of lethal shark attacks.[12] The deaths have also at times been associated with "Darwin Awards".[13]

In popular culture

In the Snowy Escape expansion pack to life-simulation video game The Sims 4, players can cause the sim to be crushed by a vending machine by performing the shake action, which will make the sim shake the vending machine. The sim may be crushed but will remain alive with a Battered and Bruised Moodlet. Should the sim perform the action again with this moodlet active, they will be crushed to death.[14]

References