
Wife Speaks Out After Husband Killed by MRI Machine
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
The wife of a man who was killed after being sucked into an MRI machine has described how the tragic moment is still "pulsating in her brain."
Newsweek called Nassau Open MRI in Westbury, Long Island, where the incident took place, on Tuesday, but the clinic had not yet opened for the day at the time of the call. The clinic told other news outlets it has no comment on the incident.
What To Know
Adrienne Jones-McAllister was at Nassau Open MRI for an MRI for her knee on July 16 when the accident took place.
She told News 12 Long Island that she asked the technician to get her husband, Keith McAllister, 61, as she needed help getting out of the MRI machine.
She said that the technician brought him into the MRI room, and her husband was wearing a 20-pound chain that he used for weight training.
Keith McAllister and a stock image of an MRI machine.
Keith McAllister and a stock image of an MRI machine.
GoFundMe/Getty Images
Jones-McAllister said that as her husband approached the machine, he was sucked into it.
She described the moment she saw the machine "snatch him" as she screamed for the technician to "turn this damn thing off!"
Jones-McAllister said that her husband suffered several heart attacks before "his whole body went limp in my arms."
"I haven't been able to sleep, I'm barely eating," the visibly emotional widow said. "I just can't believe– I'm still trying to wrap my head around the whole thing."
"I loved him so much," she said.
Jones-McAllister said she and her husband had visited the clinic before and that he had worn the chain there previously.
"That was not the first time that guy has seen that chain. They had a conversation about it before," she said about the technician.
Patients are typically asked to remove metal items before going near MRI machines because they generate powerful magnetic fields that can attract metal objects.
According to a GoFundMe page created by Jones-McAllister's daughter for funeral expenses, McAllister "was attached to the machine for almost an hour before they could release the chain." It says that he died the following day.
The fundraiser had passed $8,000 by early Tuesday.
What People Are Saying
The family's GoFundMe page says: "Keith was a husband, a father, a stepfather, a grandfather, a brother, and an uncle. He was a friend to many."

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