On the surface, panic or loss
of consciousness rarely leads to
death, but underwater, death
from drowning is often the
result. In fact, panic and loss of
consciousness account for up to
80 percent of recreational scuba
diving deaths.
Some Australian researchers,
Drs. Carl Edmonds, Douglas
Walker, and Brian Scott, felt
there was more to learn about
the causes of these dive deaths
and ways in which they might be
prevented. They analyzed 100
drowning deaths and 48 neardeath
accidents in which the
diver survived. Their report,
which appeared in the South
Pacific Underwater Medicine Society
Journal, forms the basis for this
article. We’ve included the facts
from their analysis while adding
some of our own commentary.
Water Conditions
More than half the
drownings and 60 percent of the
near-drowning survivals occurred
in calm water, although
in 4 percent of the deaths, these
calm conditions later deteriorated.
Moderately rough seas
were associated with 25 percent
of deaths and 40 percent of the
survivals, and very rough conditions
— hardly ideal diving
conditions — were associated
with 15 percent of the deaths.
Currents were associated with 46
percent of the deaths and 31
percent of the survivals. Almost
two-thirds of the deaths occurred
at depths of ten feet or
less; half occurred on the
surface or while ascending.
Air Supply
In all but the most extreme
circumstances, there is no reason
for a diver to allow his air supply
to get unnecessarily low or to run
out of air. Yet 60 percent of the
divers who didn’t survive either
were completely out of air or ran
so low on air that they were
unable to make a safe ascent.
Survivors were more likely than
non-survivors to have retained
enough air to cope with an emergency. Sadly — or even
stupidly — it was common for
divers in both groups to ignore or
pay little attention to their air
gauge. (I’ve often thought that one
way to prevent this is to ask divers
who sign up for scuba classes if
they’ve ever run out of gas while
driving. Answer yes, and you’re
promptly shown the door.)
Eight percent of deaths and 13
percent of survivals were attributable
to divers failing to turn on
their tank valve. Although the
diver had plenty of air, it was not
available. Some divers who either
jumped off a boat or kicked down
from the surface descended as
much as 10 feet before they
became aware that they couldn’t
suck air. In none of these cases had
the diver breathed from the
regulator before getting in the
water, nor had there been an
equipment check or a buddy-check
of equipment prior to descent. In a
few cases, after checking the tank
pressure and turning it off, divers
failed to fully turn their air back
on, resulting in a partial restriction
of the air supply that became
obvious only later in the dive or at
depth.
Buoyancy Compensators
A filled BC can keep a diver
from drowning: a floating diver
with his head out of the water
does not drown. Yet, sizable
numbers in both groups (52
percent of deaths, 32 percent of
near-drowning survivals) failed to
inflate their buoyancy compensators. In a few instances, the
buoyancy compensator failed to
inflate for mechanical reasons;
this accounted for 5 percent of
deaths and 8 percent of neardrowning
survivals. However, it is
noteworthy that 12 percent of the
deaths involved divers who had
inflated their buoyancy compensators,
and in the survivor group,
the BC was inflated by the victim
or rescuer in twice as many cases
as in the fatality group.
Weights
Study after study has found
that divers are reluctant to drop a
weight belt. After all, they cost
money, and the divemaster or
guide may chide divers who drop a
belt. But a dropped belt may mean
a fast ascent and could prevent
drowning. In this study, 86 percent
of the deceased divers and 74
percent of the survivors had not
dropped their belts. A few unfortunate
divers dropped their belts but
then became entangled (deaths 3
percent, survivals 2 percent).
When the victim and buddy
were both in difficulty (usually
because of an air shortage), the
overweighted diver tended to be
the one who died, even if he was
not the one whose problem
developed first. Out of 14 such
cases, 12 of the survivors were the
buoyant diver.
— Ben Davison
Next issue: Solo Diving, Buddies, and
Buddy Responses