Judging a diver’s ability to handle the conditions at
hand is a tough call for a captain or crew member. Several
Undercurrent readers have reported operators benching
divers due to medical conditions or physical limitations.
It’s unlikely that one would book a dive trip he doesn’t
think he can handle, but if a boat captain or divemaster
doesn’t think so, there can be a nasty disagreement, with
a few thousand diver dollars at stake.
One of our long time subscribers, whom we’ll call
Mark, told us Captain Mike Lever barred him from diving
on the Nautilus Explorer’s trip to Mexico’s Socorro Island
in the Pacific. Mark had previously made a successful trip
on the Nautilus Explorer in Alaska’s challenging waters,
and was booked for back-to-back trips to Socorro. Lever
said, “Diving at Socorro is not for folks who aren’t in good
physical condition.”
We exchanged letters and emails with both parties
and their accounts differ significantly; however there are
important points to be made. Lever says when people
signed up he asked if they have any medical conditions
worth noting. When the trip was under way, he also asked
if participants had any medical conditions they wished to
discuss in private. In neither case did Mark come forward.
On the second day, when Mark demanded help lifting a 2-
kg camera and housing, Lever said “it set off alarm bells.”
He asked to see Mark’s medical clearance. In Mark’s file,
besides a letter from a physician’s assistant clearing him to
dive, Lever discovered that Mark was taking medications
for a variety of maladies. Lever maintains that Mark had
not disclosed these problems when asked whether he had
any special medical requirements, conditions or history of
diving injuries.
However, says Mark, “my request for help with lifting
my equipment due to a back injury I had sustained nearly
two years ago caused him to conclude that I was unfit to
dive . . . I had been on six live-aboard trips in the interim,
had done over 200 dives since the accident.”
Mike and Mark then called Marks’s physician, who hadn’t signed off on Marks’s letter of clearance and didn’t
know much about diving medicine. Lever asked the doc
to discuss Mark’s conditions with Diver’s Alert Network
(DAN). After talking to DAN, says Lever, the physician
declined to clear Mark for diving, so Lever insisted
that Mark sit out the rest of the Socorro dives. But he
arranged an appointment for Mark with the hyperbaric
chamber doctors in port. Lever claims that, when confronted
about his medical nondisclosure, Mark said, “If
I tell you or any other operator about my medical problems,
you won’t let me dive.”
Lever allowed Mark to undertake rebreather training
on the second trip in the company of a divemaster, but
no deeper than 60 fsw. Mark was frustrated because he’d
also planned to make open circuit dives with his camera,
which he couldn’t use while training on the rebreather.
Lever refused to give Mark a refund, though he had
logged only four dives on the first Socorro trip. He did
refund deposits for the three June trips he had booked.
“If I tell you or any other operator
about my medical problems, you
won’t let me dive” |
Lever told Undercurrent he believes he acted both in
Mark’s best interest and that of his other passengers. A
refund “didn’t enter my mind,” says Lever, because Mark
“had lied to us and had ample opportunity to tell us
about his medical challenges.” Mark filled a berth on the
boat that could have gone to another paying customer.
And Mark, an extremely experienced diver, does concede
that, “Lever is right. He is the Captain. He can stop
everyone on the boat from diving for any reason at all.”
Glen Fritzler, owner of Truth Aquatics in Santa
Barbara, CA, which operates three live-aboards, has a different
point of view. “Although no one in my organization
prefers to deal with diver emergencies,” says Fritzler, “I
cannot condone keeping someone out of the water who
could ‘potentially’ be a problem. It’s a fine line and it
turns your hair gray, but it’s something we have come to
live with. Diving is a unique activity where someone can
really escape and I feel that your limits have to be decided
by you and no one else. As an operator I simply pray that
the individuals make the right choices.”
Judgments are often subjective, and therefore difficult
to defend. Take the situation witnessed by Liam Gowers
(Rockwall, TX) while diving out of Bud ’n Mary’s Marina
in Islamorada, FL. After a 100-ft. wreck dive, the instructor
of a group of advanced students informed a pupil that
he had showed symptoms of nitrogen narcosis and recommended
that he sit out the next dive. Gowers says, “If
the instructor suspected narcosis during the dive, it was
negligent of him to continue with a narc’ed student. He
can’t keep his eye on a diver suffering from narcosis and
five other divers simultaneously.” And, why does narcosis
bench a diver the next time out, especially if he is in an
advanced class? Should he not be learning to manage it?
Certifying agencies, and some dive operators, especially
in heavily regulated countries like Australia, insist
that divers fill out medical questionnaires when booking
classes or a dive trip. Such a form is downloadable at www.padi.com/english/common/courses/forms. Under the
heading “Have you ever had or do you currently have…”
it includes such seemingly innocuous conditions as frequent
or severe attacks of hay fever or allergy, recurrent
back problems, ulcers, and high blood pressure (with or
without medication). Answer “Yes” to any of these, and
you may be required to have a doctor fill out a multi-page
form or provide a letter certifying that you’re okay to dive.
If there are items you must check, then learn in advance
what documentation a dive operator will require, otherwise
you may find yourself benched for ailments that you
don’t believe affect your diving.
That’s what Ken Paff’s diabetic partner Martha does,
after a Blue Bubbles instructor in Cozumel refused to
allow her to dive after he saw her check her blood sugar
level. “Although he was nasty about it,” says Paff, “his
actions were actually in line with the guidelines of the
agencies at that time.” Fortunately, they were able to get
a letter of clearance from a doctor at a Cozumel chamber
and Blue Bubbles allowed Martha to dive. She now carries
a letter from her doctor, though few operators have
requested to see it. “In the past decade,” Paff reports,
“various agencies and operators have eliminated or lessened
their prejudices against diabetics and perhaps other
folks with medical disabilities. While the concerns with
diving by people with type 1 diabetes are real, an absolute
prohibition is certainly not.”
Tell the Truth
As Bret Gilliam pointed out in the March Undercurrent,
some divers choose to falsify health information on dive
operator applications. Occasionally, dive professionals
even encourage the practice. During a Nitrox course at
Buddy Dive in Bonaire, Jan Culbertson (Seattle, WA) saw
how flawed the screening process can be. While filling
out the PADI medical statement, one student answered
“Yes” to the question “Have you ever had or do you currently
have [a] history of diving accidents or decompression
sickness?” Without discussing the diver’s history, the
instructor told her she couldn’t take the course unless she
changed her response to “No.” “So right there in front of
the rest of the class,” reports Culbertson, “she changed
her answer and she was allowed to enroll in the class.
Didn’t seem like a very safe practice to me.”
Gilliam, the founder of Technical Diving International
and a dive travel leader for many years, concluded: “You
can bluff but that doesn’t help once you’re underwater.”
If something goes wrong and you’re found out, the best
that can happen is that you’ll get benched for the rest of
the trip. The worst is that you’ll never come back.
Dive medicine specialist Ernest Campbell, MD, focusing
on dive training, states, “Failure to report risky preexisting
medical problems would certainly be adverse to
diving safety, not only to the student but to the instructor
and others on a dive excursion.”
The Prescription Drug Threat
Joel Dovenbarger, vice president of Medical Services
for Divers Alert Network (DAN), points out that few conditions
are, by themselves, severe enough to bar someone
from diving (seizure disorders being the main one). The
problem lies in combinations of conditions, particularly
when they are treated with combinations of medications.
Dovenbarger notes that many central nervous system
meds contain nitrogen, so “risk is relative to depth” for
divers. He also points out that the most common side
effects of drugs at depth are anxiety and panic.
One of our writers has his own story. To sleep when he
travels, at his doctor’s advice, he often takes a small dose
of lorazapam. It’s actually an anti anxiety medicine that,
he reports, doesn’t cause him to sleepwalk to the refrigerator.
One morning he intentionally took a tab before
a dive to see what effect it might have underwater. Below
100 feet, he says, he felt as if he were on an acid trip, most
likely a combination of the drug’s effect at four atmospheres
and narcosis. “I had told my experienced companion
what I was doing so we managed it, but an unsuspecting
diver on the same drug might indeed panic.”
Have Your Doc Call DAN
In determining what degrees or combinations of
conditions are safe for diving, Dovenbarger insists that a
physician should decide, not an untrained individual (neither
the diver nor a local dive operator). If you and your
physician have questions, DAN will be happy to field a call
from your physician to discuss the specifics of any situation
or even to walk through the filling out of a medical
questionnaire such as PADI’s.
Like Gilliam, Dovenbarger urges divers to tell the truth
on medical forms. Otherwise, if a health crisis occurs on
a dive trip, in or out of the water, the victim may not get
proper treatment. Remember the scene in “Something’s
Gotta Give” when Jack Nicholson, suffering a heart attack,
lies about using Viagra until his doctor warns him that the
nitro in his drip could be fatal in combination with the
drug? “Unless you start with the truth,” says Dovenbarger,
“you won’t be happy with the outcome.”
Some dive operators, especially live-aboards, offer
medical questionnaires that must be completed to the
satisfaction of the operator before the trip is confirmed.
But others wait until the diver arrives, paid up. It would
be useful if an industry-wide standard could be developed,
but then not only would it require agencies to agree, it
would require countries to agree. So, without a standard,
a diver with any medical condition whatsoever needs to
do his homework before committing to a dive operator,
assess the situation and respond accordingly. Otherwise,
as our friend Mark discovered, it could be a long trip,
with little diving, and a lot of money down the drain.