How is that different to how he should behave in the other scenario?
The other scenario is they don't take care of themselves, run aggressive profiles and are at a higher risk for DCS.
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How is that different to how he should behave in the other scenario?
About a dozen of my clubmates participated in a hyperbaric medicine study some two to three years ago. The primary response factor was bubbles determined by ultrasound. The values were so over the whole map that the scientists weren't able to draw any conclusions, or point to any trend at all. The values spanned from zero to 4+ on the EB scale.The scientists who developed the PADI tables tested divers using Doppler bubble imaging to detect bubbles in the blood. They were very surprised to see what a difference there was between divers. Some developed bubbles much more easily than others.
Let's say that the oft-quoted statistic that half of DCS cases occur to people diving within limits is accurate. People seem to think this indicates that diving within limits makes no difference, but that difference is enormous. At least 95%, possibly more than 99%, of all divers dive within the limits of whatever decompression system they are using, meaning that this huge percentage is providing only half of the DCS cases, while the tiny group that is violating those limits is providing the other half. It also means that the statistical likelihood of getting DCS, which is incredibly small, is at least half of that small percentage if you stay within those limits. If the percentage of DCS cases per dive is only 0.02%, as I have heard many times, that means people diving within their limits only have a rate of 0.01%. That sounds small to people who do not understand math, but it is actually an enormous difference.[/QUOTE
Let's say that the oft-quoted statistic that half of DCS cases occur to people diving within limits is accurate. People seem to think this indicates that diving within limits makes no difference, but that difference is enormous. At least 95%, possibly more than 99%, of all divers dive within the limits of whatever decompression system they are using, meaning that this huge percentage is providing only half of the DCS cases, while the tiny group that is violating those limits is providing the other half. It also means that the statistical likelihood of getting DCS, which is incredibly small, is at least half of that small percentage if you stay within those limits. If the percentage of DCS cases per dive is only 0.02%, as I have heard many times, that means people diving within their limits only have a rate of 0.01%. That sounds small to people who do not understand math, but it is actually an enormous difference.
The other scenario is they don't take care of themselves, run aggressive profiles and are at a higher risk for DCS.
You trying to make it too black and white. The argument is just to lower your risk, whatever it is, and not assume fatalistically that your number will come up sooner or later. Do what you can to make it later rather than sooner.Why would they do that? They don’t know which group they are in.
My point is that it doesn't matter whether or not it is inevitable that a particular person gets bent in an infinite number of dives if you do not know if you are the particular person. I think we know that in the population as a whole some people will get bent. Maybe not every one, but some. So a random new diver ought to assume that will be him and dive accordingly as there is no way to know.
One of your variables is the individual diver. Another one is the number of dives. The other is kinds of dives and profiles and so on. And then your diver changes (grows older) as their dive count changes, and the rate of changes is different for everyone. So good luck trying to find practical meaning in the numbers.