Yep. Ever been on a chair lift skiing? Getting off the moving chair at the top, skis still on your feet, and skiing to the side before the chair can hit you, as well as not falling in the depression so that the people on the next chair coming won't exit on top of you - it's all part of the risks of snow skiing. Add altitude, cold, equipment challenges - lots of risks. Why would you not call that a skiing accident...??
Sorry, I don't mean to be rude, but I do take strong exception to dismissing this as a non-diving accident. From the time you leave the dock with scuba gear to the time you get back onto the dock is all part of the risks of scuba - including tanks falling on boats, etc. If we are here to learn, as I understand the purpose of this A&I forum, it's good to learn how to prevent all accidents directly involving scuba - submerged or not.
The info we have is far from complete. He did a scuba entry for a scuba dive in scuba gear, something went wrong with that, and he had a scuba accident before submerging. My best guess as I posted above is that he screwed up with his scuba gear on his scuba entry - but I'm guessing, in part based on problems I have barely survived myself.
Yep, even if it was a medical event - no more than we know from the brief, early report, being in scuba gear and doing a scuba water entry into rough seas could have possibly precipitated the problem. No way to know yet, but he was involved in a scuba dive even though he hadn't sunk yet.
Nope, not at all - but it sounds like he was on the verge of sinking.
Or incur dry-drowning after a near-drowning experience.
One my most embarrassing water mishaps happened in a pool at a family gathering, in the shallow end no less. I had my snorkel gear on and leaned over into a surface swim, inhaled, and got a dose of water in my lungs from a faulty drain valve. I stood up immediately, but the ensuing laryngospasm nearly took me down again - all while my younger cousins were laughing. It would have been pretty bad to drown in the shallow end of the pool before my kinfolk stopped laughing enough to drag me out - and we were at a remote country club, no medical services for many miles, but anyway - it was a snorkeling accident ok. Lots of ways to die in the water, and good to prevent all of them.