An AED, an automated defibrillator, only helps in some very specific heart rhythms. It works in both Ventricular Tachycardia and Ventricular Fibrillation ONLY. When the heart stops from drowning (suffocation in water here) the heart quits because the blood no longer has enough oxygen in it. When the heart stops from a heart attack it is usually because the beating of the heart got electrically disrupted. An AED helps a lot with the latter, but much more rarely with the former. In the former you have to get the blood oxygenated before the heart can start again.
Very quick and dirty explanation.
What I was referring to, was that if a heart had stopped in a diver on a dive boat, then statistically the cause would be from a drowning event. I have not seen rampant heart attacks occurring on dive boats in Florida, though there have been a number of drownings, where the heart stopped.
As you learned when you took Rescue as part of your DM course, when we pull up a diver that is not breathing, and has no heart beat, cpr by itself is not as effective as an AED, in getting the heart to start again. The book and the instructor indicated this to me, but I would obviously defer to Debersole or TS&M, as medical experts that would potentially have a far more accurate grasp of the truthfulness of this.
I don't believe these drowning events should be allowed--that poor training and poor fitness, and poor judgement was to blame for the drowning event....The solution is to fix one of these actual causes, not to say we need a trauma team on the boat, or an AED, just in case a drowning event occurs--all these divers are SUPPOSED to have been trained well, and all are supposed to be executing a proper dive plan.
At a public swimming beach, where non-swimmers wade into the water, along with heart attack's waiting to happen in couch potatoes out for a swim they can't handle....the life guards have an expectation that they will need to save someone every single day. They hope they won't have to, but the public at the beach, are not trained, are not planning, and they EXPECT to be protected and cared for.
Dive certification is supposed to make each diver competent...and those that are not, should absolutely seek out boats with full medical facilities including AEDs, lifeguards, babysitter-divemansters, and a dive site selection of only the most bathtub-like zero challenge sites. The diver with this lack of skill needs to be aware that they have low skill, and it should be up to them to seek out the boats that cater to them.
Other boats need to be allowed to cater to advanced divers.
Also,the idea of being Politically Correct sickens me. In case that was not obvious
Reckdiver and DD think every boat should buy an AED..Nice of them to decide how to spend other people's money........I think every diver should be be properly trained , and then be at such a low risk for a drowning event, that this discussion would never occur. This is partly on the instructors, and partly on the individual.
The exceptions--the medically unfit diver that appear healthy...this is THEIR responsibility to be aware of their own health, and not to have to rely on the kindness and help and protection of strangers.
In this thread we derailed, the boat in question DID HAVE an AED. It did not help in this case, and only the autopsy will give us any clue what actually occurred.