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Don't know what you mean about other agencies not having logged dive requirements. PADI used to be 20. My opinion is that as soon as your diving is relatively decent (buoyancy, etc.) you should take Rescue. This SHOULD happen way before 40 dives. Otherwise, you have the situation of two brand new divers buddying up to dive to 60', neither having a clue about Rescue techniques. If you take the course, or even just read the manual, you have SOME knowledge of the skills.40 dives requirement is a logical approach, other agencies promoting no requirements speak by it self IMHO.
I find your logic hard to follow. If you are actively diving and doing tech dives - assuming these are not solo- then it would seem that you have an "ethical" responsibility to make every effort to ensure that you can provide assistance to a buddy in trouble. The rescue course is going to provide you some very valuable resources.
For me, a major takeaway from Rescue, EFR, etc., was that it's better to do something than do nothing.
The real issue/queston is - if you don't follow your training - what is that lawyer going to do you? Me - I am not certified in Rescue - but I am a fireman - I have the skills and CPR to help out - but when we go to court I am going to say I did my best - I am not certified in rescue...
Good Samaritan should cover me... but if you are certified and not following training - you are a liability... Or at least that is how I look at... YMMV and I am not a lawyer but I do know anyone can sue anyone for any reason...![]()
If you are in a Technical dive with Deco obligations it will likely become a Body recovery scenario, you have 15min to start CPR on a victim after that chances are very small or successful, and chances of brain damage are higher.
I'm not sure what point you're making.
You had mentioned you had been thinking about doing a rescue and you believe something is better than nothing...
I do not believe that is true. In fact I believe it will make your life worse if you were certified and failed to follow your training... The lawyers will have a field day with you - you are not protected by Good Samaritan if you are trained and fail to follow your training (assuming someone can prove you are trained and you failed to follow your training). You are protected if you followed your training and a bad outcome still occurred.
If a total passerby does stop and tries to help and they are not trained they are also protected by the Good Samaritan - but once you are trained and certified the expectation of "duty to act" is higher.
What's In Those Good Samaritan Laws, Exactly?