The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machine is a life-saving diagnostic tool used in millions of medical appointments every year. But behind the sterile, quiet doors of the imaging suite, a hidden danger exists that can turn a routine visit into a tragedy in the blink of an eye.
For 61-year-old Keith McAllister, that reality turned fatal on July 16, 2025, at an imaging center in Westbury, New York.
A Moment of Help Ends in Tragedy
McAllister had accompanied his wife, Adrienne Jones-McAllister, to Nassau Open MRI for a scheduled knee scan. According to reports, once the scan was complete, Adrienne called out to her husband for help getting off the table.
A technician allowed McAllister to enter the examination room. What happened next occurred in a matter of seconds. McAllister was wearing a heavy, metal weight-training chain around his neck—an item he had worn during previous visits. As he neared the machine, the unit’s powerful magnetic field instantly snatched the heavy metal, pinning McAllister against the bore of the device.
“Seeing the machine snatch him and pull him into the machine” is a memory that continues to haunt his wife, who recounted the harrowing scene to local media. She described shouting for help, begging staff to “turn this damn thing off,” as she watched her husband’s condition deteriorate before he went limp in her arms.
What We Know
The Timeline: The incident occurred on the afternoon of July 16, 2025, at Nassau Open MRI.
The Physical Risk: MRI machines use massive magnets—often thousands of times stronger than Earth’s magnetic field—that are constantly “on.”
The Fatal Trigger: A heavy, ferrous metal chain acted as a projectile, pulling McAllister toward the magnet.
The Aftermath: McAllister suffered a medical episode at the scene, was rushed to a hospital in critical condition, and was pronounced dead the following day.
The Investigation: The Nassau County Police homicide squad launched an investigation into the facility’s safety protocols and screening procedures.
The “Missile Effect” Explained
Experts in medical safety explain that the incident is a textbook, albeit extreme, example of the “missile effect.” MRI magnets are powerful enough to pull steel and iron objects—such as oxygen tanks, chairs, or jewelry—across a room at high speeds.
Dr. Payal Sud, a medical expert, noted that the presence of a heavy chain around the neck creates a “catastrophic” risk of blunt force trauma or asphyxiation. The tragedy has renewed calls for strict adherence to “Zone IV” safety protocols, which mandate that no metallic objects enter the MRI room under any circumstances.
Why This Matters
This incident is a sobering reminder that safety in a medical setting is not just about the procedure itself, but the environment surrounding it. For the average American patient, this tragedy highlights a terrifying vulnerability: the gap between standard safety procedures and the reality of human error. When staff complacency or simple oversights occur, the life-saving technology we trust can suddenly become a lethal threat.
As investigations continue, the focus has shifted toward how a chain, reportedly seen on prior visits, was permitted inside the room at all. For the McAllister family, the focus remains on the devastating loss of a loved one who had simply walked into a clinic to help his wife.
“This is still pulsating in my brain,” his wife said, reflecting on the final moments of a day that was supposed to be routine.