For decades it’s been conventional wisdom among sport divers that
“five percent of the Navy divers get bent.” And for just as long, it’s not
been true.
Navy divers do get bent, so if you want to be the smart one at your
next gathering of divers, you’ll cite these stats, which covers the entire
U.S. Navy diving database for 1990-1995, which amounts to 648,488
dives for the 6-year period. They were collected by the Naval Safety
Center and reported in the Journal of Undersea Hyperbaric Medicine.
Out of 10,000 dives, there were an average of 1.3 incidents of Arterial
Gas Embolism, 1.3 incidents of Type I DCS, and 1.3 of Type II DCS.
Translated, this means that there is an accident rate of .39 percent,
and a DCS rate of .26 percent (or roughly twenty times less than the
conventional wisdom of 5 percent).
Keep in mind that these stats reflect carefully managed and planned
dives conducted by people who are highly trained and in reasonably
good shape