Credible estimates of the incidence of decompression
sickness are difficult to find. But Peter DeNoble,
director of research at Divers Alert Network (DAN)
led a team to analyze the rate among DAN members,
and published the results in the journal Undersea and
Hyperbaric Medicine.
They estimated the annual per-capita incidence rates
among DAN members who bought dive accident insurance
and submitted injury claims between 2000 and
2007. (They didn't know how many dives each member
had made, however.) They found that men submitted
28 percent more claims than women. The male-to-female difference was greatest between 35 and 40 years of age,
and disappeared by the mid-50s.
The highest DCS rates showed up in the age 30-39
category, after which DCS-specific claims declined
with increasing age, which DeNoble's team assumes
is a result of more conservative diving. Divers who
submitted claims in their first insured year were more
likely to drop out than divers who submitted claims
in later years, which suggests that treatment for DCS
early in one's diving experience may be a disincentive
to keep on diving.
"Per-capita Claim rates for Decompression Sickness among
Insured Divers Alert Network Members," Undersea and
Hyperbaric Medicine, Vol. 39, No.3, pgs. 709-715.