The trimix diving course I teach has a section imploring students to keep up with the changing research in the world of scuba. You don't want to base critical diving decisions on ideas that have been repudiated and are no longer believed to be true. The course itself is in example for that. It has extensive information on putting deep stops into a dive profile, and the standards require students to plan and execute a dive using deep stops. That standard, however, was dropped from the course last year, because recent research does not support the use of deep stops. The course, then, set a good example for its students when it changed the standards in light of recent research.
So how does a scuba diver keep up with changes in scuba knowledge?
I imagine a number of you would immediately reference ScubaBoard--that is, after all, how you found this thread. If you are a ScubaBoard reader who has encountered any of the very informative deep stop threads here, you would probably assume that the issue has been thoroughly settled. You have read the words of true experts in the field, and you have seen the recent research studies. You know that leading researchers no longer support deep stop methodology. You have come to a decision that is truly based on the most recent thinking by the leaders in the industry.
But what if you were a serious, conscientious diver who was not part of these ScubaBoard discussions? What if you had heard about deep stops, as an example, and wanted to know the latest thinking on them. What would you do?
My guess is most of you would start with Google, and you might put in a search phrase like "Scuba diving deep stops." So that is what I did, and I was appalled by the results.
- The featured quote that leads off the results is from Dr. Peter Bennett of DAN, and it firmly endorses deep stops. If you read the full article, though, you see that he pulls that punch in the full discussion, and you will further see that it was part of a panel discussion, with all other members of the panel strongly disagreeing with him.
- The second article quoted is also from DAN. It is a 2011 article promoting deep stops. There is a statement with it that says that the article does not reflect current thinking, but I suspect that people will read the article rather than note that it does not reflect current thought.
- The 5th article has a strong title, talking about the importance of deep stops in 2018--so it must have the latest and greatest stuff in it, right? Nope. There is no information in there that comes from the last 15 years, and it is a full-on endorsement for deep stops in all diving, including recreational diving.
- The 15th article is a strongly worded endorsement appearing on the web site of a major scuba agency--GUE. The article itself is undated, but the copyright statement on the bottom says 1998-2018, indicating to the casual reader that it is current thinking. This article says that your first stop should be at 80% of the depth of your profile--now that is a deep stop! Knowledgeable readers would know from the article's author (George Irvine) that the information is dated, but most readers would believe that the practice has the current GUE seal of approval, because there is nothing on the page to say otherwise.
- None of the heated and highly informative ScubaBoard threads appear in the first 10 pages of search results--which is as far as I went.
- In those first 10 pages of search results, I saw only a couple of results casting doubt on the efficacy of deep stops, and one of them was the aforementioned DAN article that had the non-representative quote from Dr. Bennett as an excerpt.
In short, if I were to research current thinking on deep stops using Google as my guide, I would come away absolutely convinced that the latest and greatest thinking on deep stops is that they are absolutely and unquestionably the way to go with my diving--the absolute opposite of what is actually happening with current thinking.
So--where is a diver to go to find out what is going on in the world of scuba diving?