Why are we considering CO2 hits and O2 tox in divers that panicked almost on the surface and swam down to 50 meters when already close to a out of air situation?
I know that my opinion is unpopular and I don't have even half of the experience of some people in this conversation but this incident happened because of lack of training in recreational divers.
If her instructor during AOWD or even OWD did a deco simulation with her and if she did some backgass deco dives before this trip D. would still be alive. Every student that i passed in AOWD did a deco simulation, most of them after the course also did a light deco dive.
It's not hard, it's negligibly more dangerous then a 30+ meter NDL dive and it's frankly ridiculous how many people mythologize dives that are being done all over the world (mostly the Med and Egypt) with very little to no accidents in the last 30 years to back up the claims.
Air does not kill if you take 3 breaths of it at 40 meters, OxTox does not kill after a few minutes of exposure above 1.4, Co2 does not put you to sleep in normal conditions at such low densities and exposure times and you don't need advance trimix and 3 stages to do a deco dive that lasts less then 45 minutes including the deco.
There is never a single cause to a death like this one. It is more an escalation of factors. There are two important things to do in such cases (imho):
1 - identify the physical cause; in this case, some people here assumed it is about CO2, maybe combined with O2 toxicity, and maybe not enough gas (btw, O2 toxicity gets worst under hypercapnia)
2 - human factors, namely "why this person did something so dangerous?", which often is an analysis of the escalation I mentioned before; in this case, several factors have been mentioned, including lack of training... it doesn't seem that your opinion is unpopular
However, I do not understand the advantage of exposing AOW students to deco; out of curiosity, why do you think it is an added value for them? I am not criticizing you, I am just genuinely curious, since my perception is different (I think she shouldn't have done this dive; personally, I didn't jump in the water for way less in the past)
EDIT: as far as I understand, CO2 is supposed to increase the risk of seizures associated to O2 toxicity; this happens because, with high level of CO2 in the blood, more blood goes to the brain and the risk of neurological toxicity caused by O2 increases. If she had the regulator in her mouth, I guess seizures are unlikely... then, I do not know if other possible effects of O2 toxicity could have played a role and, if yes, whether the CO2 played a role in increasing the toxicity itself... more info in the links posted before by
@Miyaru