tyesai
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Did his fiancee die and he keep diving on holiday?
CDNN :: Inquest - Ignorance, Bad Planning Killed Leigh Bishop Dive Trip Participant
DONCASTER, UK In pointed remarks that underscored the ignorance and bad planning by two British dive trip leaders who promoted and sold the holiday scuba diving package tour that killed bride-to-be Jayne Bloom, a UK coroner said divers should carefully consider and be fully aware of the level of emergency medical support available at specific dive destinations they intend to visit.
While Deputy Coroner Fred Curtis stopped short of recommending that dive trip leaders Leigh Bishop, who organized the trip, and Jeff Keep, the victim's fiancee and owner of the New Frontier Divng dive shop that promoted and sold it, be prosecuted for criminal misconduct that resulted in Bloom's death, his remarks left no doubt that he blamed the fatality, in part, on their failure to carefully research the dive destination and provide their customers with responsible and adequate emergency preparedness.
"Those who go to these remote parts (should) consider very carefully what kind of support there will be in incidents such as this," Curtis said.
Despite Keep's repeated assertions in online scuba diving chatrooms soon after Bloom's death that her "ascent was uneventful with all decompression stops completed correctly", the inquest heard expert testimony that she failed to maintain proper depth during the ascent and "ascended above proper safety levels 11 times".
Keep became intimately involved with the buxom Bloom after she signed up for one of his scuba diving courses.
Later, she proposed to him on stage at a UK dive trade show in a puerile public stunt cooked up by Bishop.
Their marriage ceremony, which was to be the climax of their Pacific island dream holiday, was canceled on June 30 soon after they arrived in Chuuk when Bloom died from severe injuries suffered while scuba diving and a two-hour delay in emergency medical treatment after uninformed dive trip leaders Bishop and Keep took her to an unmanned hyperbaric chamber.
Fatal mistakes
According to Keep, Bloom resurfaced from a rebreather decompression dive to a maximum depth of 57 meters (187 ft) and returned to the dive boat where she suddenly lost her vision and became very weak.
Despite receiving oxygen onboard the dive boat, Bloom soon lost consciousness and her condition worsened during the long 40-minute trip back to Blue Lagoon Resort, where the New Frontier Diving holiday package group had checked in two days before.
After the boat finally reached the resort and with a critically ill diver in need of immediate emergency medical care, dive trip leaders Keep and Bishop made a fatal mistake that delayed treatment for nearly an hour and a half and stemmed directly from their lack of emergency preparedness, their complete ignorance about how things work in Chuuk (and many other small and remote dive destinations) and their failure to acknowledge that Bloom was severely injured and required more than a quick "patch-up" at the local chamber before resuming their dream holiday diving the wrecks of Truk Lagoon.
Instead of rushing Bloom to the local hospital where she could first be stablized while doctors organized the island's emergency response hyperbaric medical team and a recompression table appropriate for Bloom's dive profile, Keep and Bishop wasted more precious time by taking her to the local hyperbaric chamber unaware that there was no one there to operate the facility.
"We decided to transfer Jayne to the chamber (but) when we arrived there it was unmanned," Keep complained unaware that Chuuk and many other small island destinations lack sufficient funding necessary to staff hyperbaric chambers on a 24/7 basis, but do provide an emergency response hyperbaric medical team typically deployed by local hospital ER personnel after scuba diving accident victims receive a thorough medical evaluation.
Too late
Nearly an hour and half after she reached shore and some two hours after she lost consciousness, Keep and Bishop finally got it right and took Bloom to hospital where she was stablized and evaluated as hospital officials deployed the stand-by local emergency hyperbaric medical team comprised of one doctor and two chamber technicians.
Based on Bloom's condition and her dive profile, which was downloaded from her dive computer, the emergency hyperbaric medical team applied a US Navy 6 recompression table that was extended to eight hours.
The doctor in charge of the hyperbaric medical treatment and one technician were in the chamber with Bloom during the eight hour session.
At about 2:30 a.m. on June 30, the still-unconscious Bloom was transferred back to hospital where she died about an hour later before she could be evacuated by air ambulance to Australia.
Bloom's body was eventually flown to Brisbane and returned to the UK for a post-mortem examination and funeral proceedings.
No problem
According to Keep, who is an IANTD technical diving instructor, there were no problems with Bloom's Megaladon closed-circuit rebreather and "...the ascent was uneventful with all decompression stops completed correctly."
According to unconfirmed reports, Keep and Bishop both resumed diving on the wrecks of Truk Lagoon soon after the fatal accident and completed their Chuuk holiday dive trip as planned with the exception of the wedding ceremony, which had to be canceled due to Bloom's tragic death.
According to DEMA, a California-based dive industry-marketing group, scuba diving is safer than bowling.
CDNN :: Inquest - Ignorance, Bad Planning Killed Leigh Bishop Dive Trip Participant
DONCASTER, UK In pointed remarks that underscored the ignorance and bad planning by two British dive trip leaders who promoted and sold the holiday scuba diving package tour that killed bride-to-be Jayne Bloom, a UK coroner said divers should carefully consider and be fully aware of the level of emergency medical support available at specific dive destinations they intend to visit.
While Deputy Coroner Fred Curtis stopped short of recommending that dive trip leaders Leigh Bishop, who organized the trip, and Jeff Keep, the victim's fiancee and owner of the New Frontier Divng dive shop that promoted and sold it, be prosecuted for criminal misconduct that resulted in Bloom's death, his remarks left no doubt that he blamed the fatality, in part, on their failure to carefully research the dive destination and provide their customers with responsible and adequate emergency preparedness.
"Those who go to these remote parts (should) consider very carefully what kind of support there will be in incidents such as this," Curtis said.
Despite Keep's repeated assertions in online scuba diving chatrooms soon after Bloom's death that her "ascent was uneventful with all decompression stops completed correctly", the inquest heard expert testimony that she failed to maintain proper depth during the ascent and "ascended above proper safety levels 11 times".
Keep became intimately involved with the buxom Bloom after she signed up for one of his scuba diving courses.
Later, she proposed to him on stage at a UK dive trade show in a puerile public stunt cooked up by Bishop.
Their marriage ceremony, which was to be the climax of their Pacific island dream holiday, was canceled on June 30 soon after they arrived in Chuuk when Bloom died from severe injuries suffered while scuba diving and a two-hour delay in emergency medical treatment after uninformed dive trip leaders Bishop and Keep took her to an unmanned hyperbaric chamber.
Fatal mistakes
According to Keep, Bloom resurfaced from a rebreather decompression dive to a maximum depth of 57 meters (187 ft) and returned to the dive boat where she suddenly lost her vision and became very weak.
Despite receiving oxygen onboard the dive boat, Bloom soon lost consciousness and her condition worsened during the long 40-minute trip back to Blue Lagoon Resort, where the New Frontier Diving holiday package group had checked in two days before.
After the boat finally reached the resort and with a critically ill diver in need of immediate emergency medical care, dive trip leaders Keep and Bishop made a fatal mistake that delayed treatment for nearly an hour and a half and stemmed directly from their lack of emergency preparedness, their complete ignorance about how things work in Chuuk (and many other small and remote dive destinations) and their failure to acknowledge that Bloom was severely injured and required more than a quick "patch-up" at the local chamber before resuming their dream holiday diving the wrecks of Truk Lagoon.
Instead of rushing Bloom to the local hospital where she could first be stablized while doctors organized the island's emergency response hyperbaric medical team and a recompression table appropriate for Bloom's dive profile, Keep and Bishop wasted more precious time by taking her to the local hyperbaric chamber unaware that there was no one there to operate the facility.
"We decided to transfer Jayne to the chamber (but) when we arrived there it was unmanned," Keep complained unaware that Chuuk and many other small island destinations lack sufficient funding necessary to staff hyperbaric chambers on a 24/7 basis, but do provide an emergency response hyperbaric medical team typically deployed by local hospital ER personnel after scuba diving accident victims receive a thorough medical evaluation.
Still failing to understand the obvious -- that they needed to get a critically injured diver to hospital as fast as possible so that she could be treated and stablized -- Keep and Bishop wasted more time trying to find someone who could operate the chamber.
"We couldn't (find) the operator," Keep complained.As the still-unconscious Bloom started to spasm, Keep and Bishop finally understood that she was in critical condition and that they were involved with something far more serious than an unanticipated and unwelcome afternoon break from their tropical island diving adventures."Then (we) decided that Jayne condition (sic) had become critical so she needed to go to the hospital to be stabilized before she could start recompression theory (sic)," Keep explained.
Too late
Nearly an hour and half after she reached shore and some two hours after she lost consciousness, Keep and Bishop finally got it right and took Bloom to hospital where she was stablized and evaluated as hospital officials deployed the stand-by local emergency hyperbaric medical team comprised of one doctor and two chamber technicians.
Based on Bloom's condition and her dive profile, which was downloaded from her dive computer, the emergency hyperbaric medical team applied a US Navy 6 recompression table that was extended to eight hours.
The doctor in charge of the hyperbaric medical treatment and one technician were in the chamber with Bloom during the eight hour session.
At about 2:30 a.m. on June 30, the still-unconscious Bloom was transferred back to hospital where she died about an hour later before she could be evacuated by air ambulance to Australia.
Bloom's body was eventually flown to Brisbane and returned to the UK for a post-mortem examination and funeral proceedings.
No problem
According to Keep, who is an IANTD technical diving instructor, there were no problems with Bloom's Megaladon closed-circuit rebreather and "...the ascent was uneventful with all decompression stops completed correctly."
According to unconfirmed reports, Keep and Bishop both resumed diving on the wrecks of Truk Lagoon soon after the fatal accident and completed their Chuuk holiday dive trip as planned with the exception of the wedding ceremony, which had to be canceled due to Bloom's tragic death.
According to DEMA, a California-based dive industry-marketing group, scuba diving is safer than bowling.