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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Debbie Hall

West Lothian butcher awarded £150,000 compensation after horror accident

A butcher has received £150,000 in compensation after a colleague accidentally stabbed him in the arm.

Ian Harrower (65) suffered a massive puncture wound to his right forearm after he was skewered by the six-inch blade.

The knife was so sharp it even burst through protective chainmail clothing.

The horrifying butcher accident left Ian with little use of his hand as the knife severed an artery and multiple nerves.

Meat company AK Stoddart tried to blame Ian for his own injuries – they claimed he should have told the other worker to not be near him with a knife.

But they backed down after a legal action with Digby Brown proved bosses failed to use the provide safe equipment and follow health and safety rules.

Ian, from Uphall, said: “I was a dedicated employee so they should be utterly ashamed for trying to blame me when their failings literally changed the course of my life.”

Ian was injured on March 6 2020 at a beef production line in Broxburn.

He and colleague were setting up their workspace for the day when a set of scales fell from a table.

They both attempted to catch the scales at the same time – but at that moment the other colleague was also holding a knife and the sudden lunge resulted in Ian being stabbed just below the elbow.

Ian, who has two children and three grandchildren, said: “The pain was unlike anything I’ve felt before.

“It wasn’t like the movies where the person is unaware of what’s happened until a few seconds later - this was immediate, agonising and felt like an electric shock.

“I literally shouted in pain and as I pulled away I felt the inside of my overalls become warm and wet – I knew straight away it was my blood. “That’s when other people round me started to react and they got me ready for hospital.”

Ian was taken to Edinburgh Royal Infirmary by ambulance for urgent surgery and to replace four pints of blood lost during the incident.

He later then underwent a procedure to remove a section of artery from his right thigh to repair the wound to his arm.

Although the actual wound has now healed Ian was left with lifelong physical complications.

He now has little feeling or mobility in his right hand meaning he has had to re-learn tasks with his left-hand and he can no longer ride his motorbike, do gardening or care for his disabled wife.

On top of that, the injury forced him into early retirement which resulted in a loss of earnings for him and his family.

Ian added: “My hand is now in constant agony and I can barely use it.

“I’m meant to be approaching the time of my life when I get to relax and focus on family so to now have to go through this and re-learn even basic tasks is devastating.”

Gordon Dalyell, partner at Digby Brown in Edinburgh, said: “Ian’s case is one that illustrates that wearing PPE is not the be all and end all for workplace safety – equipment needs to be fit for purpose and processes need to be properly risk assessed.

“These are basic legal rights and if they’re not followed then people have legal options – so people should never assume they don’t have a case or be put off seeking legal advice.”

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