Page 263 - Diving Medicine for Scuba Divers

Basic HTML Version

Chapter 34 — 2
compressed air. The BSAC do a similar job in the UK and DAN-AP Diver Fatality Project is
the Australian compiler. Unfortunately significant data is frequently not available and so
relevant causal factors are often underestimated. Another Australian approach (the ANZ
series of diving fatalities) was to select and analyse only the accidents in which sufficient
data was available to make the analysis credible, and to determine what factors materially
contributed to the fatality. Most of our statistics come from this source and are rounded up,
for simplicity.
OVERVIEW
!
Diving Fatality Data
• 90% died with their
weight belt on
.
• 86% were
alone
when they died.
• 50% did
not inflate their buoyancy
vest.
• 25% encountered their difficulty first on the
surface
,
50% actually died on the surface.
• 10% were
under training
when they died.
• 10% were advised that they were
medically unfit
to dive.
• 5% were cave diving.
• 1% of “rescuers” became a victim.
!
Age.
The recorded deaths range from children (pre-teens) to septuagenarians. Some decades ago
the average age of the deceased was in the early 20s. Then there developed a small increase
in the middle ages (45-60 years). This bimodal curve has now become distorted on the other
side, and the average scuba death age is now 43 years. The reasons for this increasing age of
death are:
The “youngsters” from the 1970-80 scuba diving boom are now older
Cardiac disease, the sudden death syndrome, affects the elderly and diving introduces
more cardiac hazards than many other sporting activities
Diving is becoming a life-style option for the increasingly active and affluent elderly,
with more older people taking up this sport
!
Gender.
In the 1990s 1 in 10 of the fatalities were women. The actual percentage of women in the
overall diving population was about 1 in 3, suggesting that women are safer divers than men.
Even now females account for only 20% of the deaths.
!
Diving Experience.
In most series, 1/3 were inexperienced, 1/3 had moderate experience and 1/3 had
considerable experience. The most dangerous dives were the first dive and the first open
water dive. In half the cases the victim, based on witness statements and previously logged
dives, was extending his diving experience (depth, duration, environment, equipment etc.)
and thus did not have the experience to undertake the final dive. For this reason, any diver
extending any of his dive parameters (depths, durations, environments, equipment) is advised
to do this only with more experienced supervisors.