A Rescue Diver certificate holder. That’s all it is. Would possibly attempt a rescue or prevent one but don’t count on it.is a rescue diver like those with the fire department or a person with the rescue cert card? Trying to get clarity. Thank you
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
A Rescue Diver certificate holder. That’s all it is. Would possibly attempt a rescue or prevent one but don’t count on it.is a rescue diver like those with the fire department or a person with the rescue cert card? Trying to get clarity. Thank you
For professional reasons, I will move Washington DC next year. I will make sure to never dive in the USThis is a commonly held belief that I’ve never seen come true in my 10+ years of EMS experience or 20+ years total of emergency medicine experience.
If you’re not on the clock you have no duty to act (5ish states have laws saying bystanders must help, know your state laws)
![]()
Blood Pressure | TheEMTSpot
The science of pressure might be too complicated, but when it comes to your blood pressure, it is too easy to understand because, on this page, we have everything you need to understand about your heart and blood pressurewww.theemtspot.com
If you’re not on the clock you don’t have a large malpractice insurance policy covering you.
Both of those facts make the trained bystander a very unappealing target for a lawyer. Yes you can get sued. Anyone can sue anyone for just about anything.
None the less, you don’t even need a lawyer to fight that one. If you’re not on the clock you have no duty to act. Even if your state has a law requiring action I don’t believe any require you to place yourself in peril, like trying to rescue a drowning diver.
And since you don’t have a several hundred thousand to million dollar insurance policy covering you, lawyers know they won’t get any large settlement from the average Joe (if your a million dollar diver then YMMV), the lawyers will go after the parties with large insurance coverage.
I’ve been through malpractice suits, and I’ve been the Good Samaritan. I’ve never seen a Good Samaritan get sued, and I’ve never seen or heard of someone not responding getting dragged into the case.
With all of that in mind, operate however makes you comfortable. If I’m in a situation I don’t want to deal with the medical questions and someone asks what I do, I fix computers.
If I see a crash in town without EMS responders yet I drive right by. (If I witness the crash I may stop to be a witness, not render aid). EMS will be there soon enough.
If I’m driving cross country and see a crash, I’ll likely stop, as I know aid may be some time a way.
Thankfully as of yet I haven’t needed to intervene on a dive boat. If I did or not would likely revolve around how sick someone was and how far away help is.
(All of this applies in the United States. I have no knowledge of international duty to act requirements)
At some past point, I've read of someone getting badly sick from breathing off a BCD, presumably due to microbes in the bladder. People vary widely in what measures they use to clean those. I don't know how much of a real world risk this is. When I want mine empty (e.g.: for a back roll with negative entry), I stand beside my rig, hit the inflator button to release pressure, and mash the sides of the wing.
I'd be curious as to whether deliberately sucking air out of a BCD bladder into your lungs is a substantial risk, or no big deal?
Strange decision based on misreading some incomplete information.For professional reasons, I will move Washington DC next year. I will make sure to never dive in the US. Will go to Mexico instead.
He's hoping to avoid the US laws and penchant for sue happiness.Strange decision based on misreading some incomplete information.
No, good catch. I should have been more clear.Do you generally do a checkout dive before going on a boat for a day of diving? I have never had that happen anywhere in the world. I have only had checkout dives on a few liveaboard trips.
That’s incorrect. In SSI, AOW is not a specialty you earn a certification for. It’s a recognition of completing 4 specialties. Rescue is a specialty, and AOW is not a prerequisite for it.In SSI, you become AOW before being rescue. It is not about bragging but I thing that it is an important information. A rec RD is nothing like a lifeguard but he/ she can help in some situations. They are CPR and rescue breath trained. They can help surfacing a diver using correct techniques, know when to ask for pure oxygen to be administered, make a « preliminary » DCS diagnostic. They are no nurse, medic, doctor or else. But they can make a difference in a self regulated industry where there is not always a health professional around.
He didn’t “allow” his buddy to plummet. He didn’t to anything to his buddy, his buddy did something to himself. And OP should not have been able to provide assistance. If he’s weighted properly, he can’t plummet after someone else, because he can only descend slowly due to proper weighting.You were the guys buddy and allowed him to apparently plummet in an uncontrolled manner and were unable to provide assistance. If that were me, I would feel bad about that.