Unlike American certification
agencies, the British SubAqua
Club doesn't avoid reporting on
injured and dead divers to make
diving seem as safe as stamp
collecting. In fact, they make their
reports public so divers can learn
from errors to become safer divers.
From their 1996 report we
wish to cite a few injury cases so
we all can learn from the unfortunate
few who erred and got hurt.
Too often at the end of a long
dive someone has to return to the
bottom to free the anchor. This
British instructor went to 55 feet,
but had 12 minutes of stops as he
surfaced with his students. He
then reentered the water to 45
feet to free the anchor, which had
gotten stuck. He exerted himself,
surfaced rapidly and out of
breath, with bends resulting.
Recompression treatment resolved
the problem.
While this case seems almost
like one noted urban myth, it
indeed happened. During an
ascent from a wreck, a diver was
hooked by a fisherman and
dragged toward the surface.
Every so often the fisherman let
the line go slack and the diver
sank again. The diver s buddy
finally managed to cut him free,
but he made a rapid ascent to the
surface.
One nightmare ascent involved
two wreck divers. One tied
a line to a wreck and released the
buoy in preparation for their
ascent. The line did not run
freely, so they detached it from
the wreck, but it caught one
diver's thumb and pulled him
rapidly upward as the buoy rose.
The divers were attached to each
other by a buddy line, so both
were carried to the surface,
shooting past a five-minute
required stop.
American reports never talk
about out-of-water injuries, but
they occur. And they ain't fun.
While getting out of his gear, this
Brit bloke had a clip on his BC
break, causing the whole rig, tank
included, to drop to the earth.
His big toe was in the way and the
tank fractured it.
Two fully dressed divers were
walking toward the entry point
for a dive. Their route down some
steps was blocked by a group of
school children. In trying to
negotiate past them, one diver fell
and broke his leg.
Finally, there were two blokes
who drifted off their anchor
line, got to the surface, and had
no way to attract attention. A
simple safety sausage would have
gotten attention, but they drifted
nearly three miles out to sea
where, by sheer luck, they were
spotted by another dive boat.