Mother dies in dorm bed fall

UNC to check lofting safety

By Andy Thomason
Updated: 09/03/10 1:27am
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A UNC student’s mother died after falling out of a bed Aug. 19 and sustaining a head injury in Kenan Residence Hall.

Donna Sykes, 49, was found unconscious when EMS officials responded at 1:44 a.m, according to a campus police report. Sykes, who was staying with her daughter at the time, was later transported to the emergency room.

Information about the incident was not immediately released because the University defers to the privacy preferences of the family, said Christopher Payne, associate vice chancellor for student affairs.

“Our first priority is to support the student and the family,” he said.

The woman’s daughter contacted a resident adviser, who then called an ambulance, the report states.

Sykes was found unconscious at the scene by paramedics.

Bradley said the department is examining the safety of beds in residence halls, adding that the University usually receives between 50 and 100 railing requests each year. Railings are provided free to students who e-mail requests through FixMyRoom@fac.unc.edu.

“The manufacturer doesn’t require them and they haven’t really been an issue for safety reasons that needed to be addressed. Now we’re going back and taking a look at that,” Bradley said.

Payne said students have several options to increase safety measures in their rooms.

“Students have generally made their own risk assessment regarding their level of comfort with the options they have available to them including bunking, lofting, or leav ing the beds separate and on the floor,” Payne said in an e-mail.

In the incident report, drug and/or alcohol use was cited as a factor.

Rick Bradley, assistant director of the housing department, said that although alcohol intoxication often plays a role in the uncommon instance when students fall out of their beds, he believes it did not in this instance.

“I’ve been here for 15 to 16 years, and I can’t recall more than three or four,” he said. “They’re usually related to intoxication from a student. That was not the case in this instance, as I understand.”

Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu.

Published September 1, 2010 in News, Campus

8 comments

UNCfan4ver
September 2, 2010 at 9:28 AM
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Why not just require railing if a bed is lofted? It would be pretty simple and everyone is safe. I am sure students wouldn’t care either way, so why look in to it, just do it.


salsachip
September 2, 2010 at 1:04 PM
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I’m not really sure if this is a correction because I couldn’t find the incident report online, but I noticed that the author of this said that “in the incident report drug and/or alcohol use was cited” and that Rick Bradley was quoted saying that it wasn’t. This is a really tragic story, and I hope the assistant editor who wrote this story checked his facts.


deamon deac
September 2, 2010 at 1:12 PM
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I agree with salsachip. Can we get a correction on whether or not alcohol was a factor?


BunkBed Victim
September 2, 2010 at 1:41 PM
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I fell from a top bunk bed on June 29, 2009 — had to have broken hip surgically repaired the next day! NO drugs or alcohol involved in my fall either — but they were in a hurry to let me know that medical bills were covered. I was out of work for 4 1/2 months….and quite angry to be facing a hip replacement in my future. It is a combination of dangerously high/unsafe beds and no padding under the carpets — all in the name of saving money!


Nicole McGinley
September 2, 2010 at 2:05 PM
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Since when are railings available for beds? And why isn’t that common public knowledge?


Jessica
September 2, 2010 at 11:27 PM
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I had no idea that railings were available for dorm beds. If this was true a few years ago, nobody bothered to tell me about it or write it on any of the housing information. I worried a lot at first about falling out of my E-haus bed. This poor woman.


engineer
September 3, 2010 at 10:32 PM
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I suppose it would be safer if the railings were opt-out, not opt-in, and beds would be set up with rails installed, and the rails removed on request.


Ian Curtis
September 3, 2010 at 11:08 PM
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There is a hyperlink to the incident report in the article, and on it the “Yes” box is checked next to “Drug/Alcohol Use.” I think what some of you are asking for is not a correction, but rather another story on or a clarification regarding the involvement of drugs/alcohol, or why it was marked on the form that way.

 
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