Make no mistake. More children
at increasingly younger ages
are going scuba diving.
Many diving parents want
their children to experience
the colors, creatures, calm and
curiosity of the underwater
world. And, the dive industry
wants to expand the market. By
marketing diving to families and
certifying children, the entire
industry — the training agencies,
the manufacturers, dive stores,
and dive travel — benefits econ
omically.
With an eye toward promoting
the sport, in 1999 the
Recreational Scuba Training
Council, a standard- setting body
whose membership is composed
of training agencies, eliminated its
recommended age of 15 for junior
certification. No longer fettered by
minimum age limits, several major
training agencies lowered the age
for extended dive experiences and
conditional certifications. For example,
today PADI’s “Seal Team” and
SSI’s “Scuba Rangers” offer scuba
experiences to children as young as age 8, and junior open water certification
at age 10.
Despite the undeniable
appeal of introducing youngsters
to the underwater world and
making scuba a family activity,
several psychological and physiological
reasons demand consideration
in opening scuba to 8-yearolds.
To understand the psychological
and physiological concerns
requires recognizing the age variation
at which children make the
cognitive, behavioral and physical
transition from one developmental
stage to the next. In fact, this
well-known variability itself forms
a basis for questioning the policy
of lowering ages.
Cognitive Issues
Among cognitive concerns is
the child’s ability to acquire and
manipulate information.
According to Jean Piaget’s widely
influential system, three developmental
periods are germane to
child scuba divers.
The first, the Pre-Operational
stage, begins about age 2 and
extends to about age 7. In the
later years, a child has an intuitive
though rudimentary grasp of
some logical concepts. A child’s
perceptions still dominate his
judgment. He will tend to focus
attention on one aspect of an
object while ignoring others. He
is unable to understand the principles
underlying proper behavi
or, relying on the do’s and don’t simposed by authority.
While it is uncommon, some
children 8 and older are delayed
in the Pre-Operational stage and
the dive agencies have no explicit
criteria for screening them out.
But, a late-developing child could
forget to continue to exhale
while making an emergency
ascent or may not place anothers’
safety on par with his own. It is
up to the instructor (who could
himself be a teenager of 18) to
recognize cognitive immaturity
and refuse to teach the child.
During the next, or Concrete
Operational stage (covering
approximately age 7-11 years),
logical thought develops. But it
remains dependent upon concrete
referents. While the child is
developing the ability to appreciate
concepts such as length, mass
and volume, and to arrange
objects in a logical sequence, it
remains linked to objects present
— not objects in the abstract.
One can assume that the child at
age 11 is much more capable
than the child at age 8 in this
stage .
The leadership in this
conservative industry
has taken a “relaxed”
attitude regarding
diving safety. |
The new policy for PADI, SSI
and others clearly allows children
in the Concrete Operational
stage (7-11 years) to enroll in
scuba programs. The risks are
not inconsequential. For example,
a child in this period may be
able to understand basic scuba
theories such as Boyle’s law and
solve a few problems. However,
he will be unable to hypothesize
from such principles and extend
them to a wider application —
such as appreciating that an
empty tank may allow for a few
more breaths as one ascends.
More worrisome, when faced
with a scuba emergency, such as
a BC inflator mechanism stuck in
the open position, they will
unlikely be able to generate multiple
solutions to the situation.
And, they would unlikely be able
to select the best alternative:
attempting to vent the BC continuously
rather than disconnecting
the inflator hose.
In the final stage of Formal
Operations (covering approximately
age 11-15 years), thought gradually
becomes less tied to concrete reality
and becomes more abstract. The
ability to generate abstract propositions
and multiple hypotheses and
assess their possible outcomes
becomes evident. This development
allows individuals to think about
what might be, rather than just what
is. The levels of cognitive ability evident
when a child completes this
stage are those most appropriate to
safe scuba.
Behavioral Issues
Children are notorious for being
exuberant, impulsive and feeling
invincible. These are normal childhood
traits that typically aren’t mastered
until the mid to late teens, or
even later. This has obvious implications
for the appreciation and avoidance
of risk — and the ability to act
as a responsible dive buddy.
Physical Issues
Patent foramen ovale (PFO):
During fetal development, blood
flows through a small opening
between the right and left upper
chambers of the heart. The lungs
are inoperative and the mother oxygenates
blood. At birth, however, this
opening is supposed to close, shunting
blood to the now-functioning
lungs. While this “hole in the heart”
usually seals by the third month of
life, it does not always. Estimates of
incomplete closures in older children
and younger teens run higher
than 50 percent in certain groups.
Whatever the exact figures, the
research suggests an increased incidence
of PFO as age decreases
below 20.
Without complete closure, blood
can flow from the right to the left
side of the heart without passing
through the lungs. Increases in right
chamber pressure that occur with
common equalization techniques
like the Valsalva maneuver —
squeezing your nose, closing your
mouth, and blowing — can move blood through the hole and bypass
the lungs. When this happens,
nitrogen bubbles that can form in
the bloodstream may pass directly
into the arteries and not be filtered
by the lungs. This of course can
lead to an embolism or DCS.
Possible reta rdation of bone
growth : Long bones, like the
humerus and femur, mature from
growth plates, the active ends of
bones where increases in length
occur. The last of the growth plates
generally do not cease activity until
the late teens or early twenties. As
these growth plates depend upon
nearby blood vessels for oxygen
and nutrition, physicians have long
been concerned that nitrogen bubbles
in the bloodstream may result
in damage to these critical tissues.
In addition, the development of
bone and connective tissue involves
molecular oxygen, raising the possible
adverse effects of the elevation
of oxygen partial pressures occurring
during diving.
Heat regulation : Due to a relatively
large skin mass to body mass
ratio, children do not regulate
body heat as well as adults. Until
the mid-teens or so, youth are far
more vulnerable to hypothermia.
And, alarmingly, a child may be
hypothermic yet have no complaints,
and still feel warm to the
touch .
Eustachian tube development : In younger children, the
Eustachian tube is narrower and
more horizontal than later in development.
While this is unlikely to be
problematic in children over age
12, it has implications for equalizing,
including potentially damaging
reverse squeeze, for children
closer to age 8. Furthermore,
young divers with immature
Eustachian tubes may be subject to
more frequent middle ear infections.
Since a diver must be able to
clear his ears safely and comforta
bly, a person with a middle ear
infection should not dive. So, a
child must recognize it, tell someone,
and not dive.
“ There is insufficient information available to
make any evidence-based medical judgment
for or against children in scuba diving.”
— PADI |
The Response of the
Dive Training Community
The positions of several agencies
are based on conclusions
expressed by John Kinsella,
Director, Training and Quality
Management of PADI America,
in his article entitled “Kids and
Diving” (The PADI Undersea
Journal— First Quarter, 2001).
After reviewing the evidence for
potential medical concerns
expressed by DAN, he concluded:
“There is insufficient information
available to make any evidence-
based medical judgment
for or against children in scuba
diving . ”
SSI allows children as young
as age 8 to have a shallow water
scuba experience in their “Scuba
Rangers” program. Children 10
to 12 may receive a junior open
water certification with certain
limitations. Once they turn 12,
they may upgrade to a regular
open water diver. Those 12 and
older are eligible to become a
Nitrox specialty diver.
When we asked Dennis M.
Pulley, SSI Director of Training ,
about their program, he told us
that “SSI is aware of medical and
psychological concerns in divers
as young as 12.” However, he
cited the RSTC position that
medical experts are unable to
provide any documentation or
proof why an individual must be
at least 12 years of age to begin
scuba training. Pulley also
remarked that, “Psychologically,
one could argue that many
young males between the ages of
16 and 30 could have the same
attitude of being invincible.”
It is true that many theoretical
medical and behavioral concerns
have not been subjected to controlled
studies on humans. And
may never. The ethical issues are
obvious. For those issues that may
be studied, it will be a long and
painstaking process, as evidenced
by how difficult gathering useful
data on DCS has been.
It seems, then, to drop the
training age with no longitudinal,
hard data about the effect on
children is questionable at best.
Historically, the response of training
agencies to incomplete
knowledge has been to err on
the side of safety. Think about
how the agencies have treated
dive tables for all gases, how they
fought against Nitrox because it
was unsafe and unstudied, how
conservative they have been on
dive-to-fly estimations, depth limits,
and clearance to dive for
medical disorders that may pose
a risk to scuba divers. Yet the
leadership in this conservative
industry has taken a “relaxed”
attitude regarding the diving safety
of children.
However, while there may be
no formal studies of the effect of
diving on children, PADI and
European-based CMAS have
long offered swimming pool
scuba to children as young as age
4, and restricted open water certification
for those to age 8. To
date, the results cause no alarm.
Even allowing for the extent to
which good PR may influence disclosure
of adverse events, if children
were sustaining harm in significant
numbers, liability issues would presumably
force this information into
the open.
“The medical and developmental concerns
a re sufficiently compelling to preclude scuba
for those less than age 12.”
— NAUI |
To their credit, PADI and SSI
have taken sensible steps to address
medical and developmental concerns.
For example, the Seal Team ,
Bubblemaker and Scuba Rangers
programs are restricted to a pool or
pool-like environment. Both agencies
require that certified divers ages
10-11 be accompanied by a certified
parent, legal guardian, or professional
dive leader, and limit maximum
depth to 40 feet. We should
note, however, that while these
depth limits do control the partial
pressures of nitrogen and oxygen,
an embolism can occur in as little as
four feet of water. PADI has taken
special educational efforts to alert
instructors to the safety issues. And
while current instructors haven’t
been trained to certify children but
still can, future instructors will find
extensive material incorporated into
upcoming revised Instructor
Development Courses.
Nonetheless, not all agencies
have been willing to embrace scuba
experiences for kids. Neither NAUI
nor the YMCA — both nonprofit
organizations in contrast with PADI
and SSI — offer scuba programs for
children less than 12 years of age.
Frank Toal, of the NAUI training
office, told Undercurrent that the
agency found the medical and
developmental concerns sufficiently
compelling to preclude consideration
of scuba for those less than age
12. Additionally, NAUI’s junior
scuba certification, for ages 12-14,
imposes a 60-foot maximum depth limit and requires supervision by
a certified diver age 18 or older.
Such reservations are not limited
to these two training agencies
and many experts have been
outspoken in their opposition
(see sidebar). World-recognized
dive medicine expert Dr. Ernest
Campbell has expressed misgivings
about allowing his children
to be certified at a young age, and
said that he probably would have
waited until their midteens if he
had it to do again.
So, what’s a parent to do?
Admittedly the issues are complex.
Yet it is clear, children face
greater risks than adults. Parents
or guardians must be thorough
and responsible when considering
whether to enroll in a PADI
or SSI program.
Any child being considered
for a compressed air at depth
experience or scuba certification
should receive a pediatric examination
with the expressed purpose
of clearance for diving. The
child’s psychological maturity for
diving should be evaluated
through open and honest discussions
between the child, parent
or guardian, and a knowledgeable
instructor. If any party has
substantial reservations, wait until
these resolve. Under no circumstances
should an unwilling child
be coerced into scuba. If all signs
are go, make sure the youngster
has gear he or she can manage,
wears adequate thermal protection,
and is enrolled in a class of similar
aged children. Finally, for those
children receiving certifications
with restrictions, ensure that all
conditions are scrupulously
observed. Attend the classes with
your child and if you have any
doubts about the child, the instruct
or, or the class, work them out or
consider other classes later.
—Doc Vikingo