Well after working at night on the flight deck for 4 west-pac cruises and numerous other detachments it's a bonafide fact that the flightdeck is a dangerous place. I was up on the flight deck one night when one of our plane captains got caught on the wrong side of the #4 catapult. He was stretched straight out holding on to a tiedown chain from the nose wheel of his plane it was a tense moment untill the plane on #4 cat launched.
Another fellow in my shop stood up infront of an intake on a turning F-14 from our sister squadron after coming up out of a catwalk and walking under the A/C. Luckily he was just short enough that he kept from being bent backwards into the intake. I was his fault he didn't go up to the nosewheel then exit from under the A/C as taught. Being in a hurry can be a big problem.
Couse I had my share of bonehead stunts too. First time I ever went up to the flightdeck on my way back down i fell into the catwalk, I coulda swore the ladder was right there! During a pushback I got a little too close to the starboard intake on on my sister squadrons F-14's and I felt the tug of a Pratt & Whitney TF-30 P414A until one of the ordies jerked me back and had a few kind words to say I won't say anything about the E-2 Prop arc I almost walked through while the plane was running on apu or huffer I got a real "Your a look from the Safety guy from the Hawkeye squadron. The props weren't spinning just the plane had all the prerequsites met and if someone hit the wrong switch it would have been a bad day at blackrock.
All in all naval ships are a dangerous environment not just flightdecks seems like everything aboard them can bite