Why Divers Die

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cdiver2

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A very intresting read taken from Yorkshire divers board= undercurrent

Interesting reading

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Why Divers Die
Part V- problems with gear
From the September, 1998 issue of Undercurrent

Faulty equipment from a manufacturer rarely leads to a diver's death. More common is a diver's failure to maintain equipment, carry or wear the right gear, or assemble his gear properly. Newer divers are especially vulnerable to errors. Wearing too much weight, having an encumbered weight belt, or failing to drop the belt when one's life is at stake frequently contributes to diver deaths.

Inexperienced divers often wear far too much weight. Then, once underwater, they fail to add air to their BCs and unknowingly kick constantly to keep from sinking. Next time you're among a dozen divers on a day boat, you will invariably see one or more kicking like crazy to keep from sinking. Of course, that diver will be the first to run out of air.

Consider this 32-year-old inexperienced diver who toted 46 pounds of weight. He ran out of air after he went to 123 feet for twenty minutes. He refused to buddy breathe, but did accept his buddy's spare air. However, during his ascent, he panicked and headed back down, or perhaps sank, never dropping his belt. His body was recovered later.

When you're in trouble, you drop your weights to ensure that you will float; that's why it's important to make sure during your pre-dive check that you can indeed release your weight belt. This 50-year-old guy, with only five dives, could not. He ran out of air and became separated from his buddy. Another diver found him floating beneath the surface, unconscious, and they could not resuscitate him. He had incorrectly attached his weights so that he couldn't release the buckle on the weight belt.

A similar fate befell this 31-year-old certified diver, who made a shore entry with his buddy. After a long dive, but only to 15 feet, they surfaced and began to swim to shore. Struggling against a strong current, the decedent sank below the surface. When they recovered his body a month later, they found he had unsnapped his weight belt, but it was caught under the straps of his buoyancy compensator.

Frequently, when divers set out to do a brief task, they treat their gear cavalierly. This 65-year-old diver jumped in to retrieve a ladder he had lost in 20 feet of water. He didn't connect his power inflator to his BC and inadvertently put his weight belt over his regulator hose. He apparently discovered the problem in the water, but a strong current swept him away from his boat, he sank, and he drowned.

Off Fort Lauderdale, four people on a private boat were ready to dive, so a 38-year-old diver jumped in the water to attach the boat to a buoy. He had yet to don all his gear, but wore his weight belt, which pulled him down when he hit the water. When he didn't surface, the other divers went in after him and pulled him to the surface, but it was too late.

A 46-year-old male was collecting mussels while on scuba, but was not wearing fins or a wetsuit in 64-degree water. He was found drowned, without his weight belt, in water shallow enough to kick out of had he been wearing fins.

A 33-year-old male on a large dive boat went down alone to hunt lobsters. When he didn't return, divers searched and found him drowned in a cavern at 50 feet with an empty tank. It turned out that his BC would not hold air and that he had incorrectly attached his first stage to his tank, probably resulting in a large air leak. While he failed to monitor his air, a buddy would have noticed the leak and presumably informed him during the dive.

A 43-year-old male with only three post-certification dives entered a lake with his buddy to spearfish. His buddy became entangled in fishing line, and when he freed himself, he could not find his dive partner. After searching, he went for help. Two days later, the dead diver was found entangled in fishing line at 80 feet. He did not have a dive knife and carried his weight in his BC pockets.

A 43-year-old experienced female diver hadn't been diving in eighteen months. Before her shore entry in rough seas, she complained that the neck dam was too tight on her drysuit. She said she was going to skip the dive, but when the other divers returned they found her floating beneath the surface. An investigator found that the neck dam was so tight it could have interfered with her breathing.

Most experienced divers know that just because a diver sports an advanced certification doesn't mean he knows how to dive, let alone lead dives. There is no substitute for experience and maturity. Nonetheless, training agencies continue to turn turkeys into divemasters if they invest the money and time to go through a course - brains are not necessarily a criterion. Take the case of this 31-year-old certified "divemaster" who was now on his 32nd dive. Wearing a drysuit, he went to 34 feet in a freshwater lake, where he had equipment problems and aborted the dive. On the surface, he told his dive buddy that he was unable to inflate his buoyancy compensator. His buddy tried to help him to shore, but the decedent slipped beneath the surface and drowned. He was overweighted, and his low-pressure inflator hose was not connected to his BC.

When we look at diving deaths, we usually learn that the official cause is drowning or embolism or heart attack. However, in many, if not most, of these cases, panic is the precursor - and perhaps the real cause. A diver runs out of air, but he could buddy-breathe and doesn't; a diver gets low on air and shoots to the surface only to embolize; a diver gets entangled and could free himself, but he panics and gets hopelessly entangled.

One of the more tragic examples of panic comes when a dead diver is found with his regulator out of his mouth or his mask missing - often a result of panic. In these pages several years ago, Dr. William P. Morgan noted that anxious individuals exercising on a treadmill often remove an oxygen face mask if they have the sensation of suffocating. In studies, some anxious firefighters wearing a respirator will remove their face mask (their air supply) if they experience respiratory distress. Rescuers sometimes find dead fire-fighters with their face mask removed, although air remains in their tank. Indeed, divers in a panic about running out of air are frequently seen by their colleagues pulling their masks off.

Several DAN cases illustrate the problem:

A 35-year-old inexperienced male diver made a shore entry and a long surface swim with his buddy. He was having difficulty and swallowing water, so they headed back to shore on their regulators. However, he continued to struggle and did not have his regulator in his mouth when the buddy came to his aid. His buddy pulled him to shore, where resuscitation efforts were unsuccessful.

A 52-year-old male with limited diving experience became separated from his buddies just before ascent from 46 feet. They found him on the bottom with more than 1000 psi in his tank, but his regulator was out of his mouth, and he drowned.

A 24-year-old diver with little experience appeared anxious before her quarry dive. Underwater, she panicked at 25 feet and took her regulator out of her mouth. Her buddy surfaced to get assistance and returned to find her unconscious on the bottom. She spent four weeks in intensive care before they pronounced her brain dead.

A 35-year-old certified diver joined a commercial dive charter. At the beginning of the dive, his buddy had a problem with his weight belt and returned to the boat. He continued to dive alone but did not return. They found him drowned on the bottom, with his regulator out of his mouth. He had nearly a full tank of air.

A 54-year-old woman with little diving experience was on a wreck in 90 feet of water. For unknown reasons, she removed her regulator from her mouth while on the bottom. An instructor helped her to the surface, but she could not be resuscitated.

A 40-year-old infrequent but experienced diver was with his son when witnesses observed him having difficulties on the bottom. At one point, he did not have his regulator in his mouth, and other divers helped him to the surface. He lost consciousness and was unable to be resuscitated back on the boat.

Keep this in mind: if you have a difficult time breathing, a sudden chest pain that frightens you, or any other underwater stressor, don't remove your regulator - ever. Keep breathing, get out of the water, and stay alive.
 
Consider this 32-year-old inexperienced diver who toted 46 pounds of weight. He ran out of air after he went to 123 feet for twenty minutes. He refused to buddy breathe, but did accept his buddy's spare air. However, during his ascent, he panicked and headed back down, or perhaps sank, never dropping his belt. His body was recovered later.

Please tell me this is fictional.
 
Cdiver2,

Thanks for this report, it was very eye opening. Sad to hear about so many tragic deaths in our sport. These are great examples why it's so important to continue to practice skills and buddy checks. Sometimes thinking can get you killed. It has to be reactive conditioning.

Maybe we should start adding the Navy seals emergency training to certification??? But I guess most people would panic and quit.

Very informative, thanks again.

Dive Smart; Dive Safe
Enjoy the ride
:14:
 
I'm "new" to scuba diving, but grew up in the waters of Florida. I have used weight belts numerous times hunting for lobster. However, I never weighted myself that I wouldn't float on a full breath. I try to take the minimalist approach to scuba, the least amount of "stuff" I have to take on a dive, the better. I am still serving in the Army, and prefer the KISS method (Keep It Simple Stupid!) when appropriate. I want to know how someone got through an open water class thinking 46 lbs. of weight was appropriate. In my open water classes, we tested our buoyancy adding weight in 2-pound increments. When I'm in fresh water with a full size farmer john style wetsuit, boots, gloves, and BCD, I only need 10 lbs of weight to mainting my buoyancy.
 
Firebrand:
I'm "new" to scuba diving, but grew up in the waters of Florida. I have used weight belts numerous times hunting for lobster. However, I never weighted myself that I wouldn't float on a full breath. I try to take the minimalist approach to scuba, the least amount of "stuff" I have to take on a dive, the better. I am still serving in the Army, and prefer the KISS method (Keep It Simple Stupid!) when appropriate. I want to know how someone got through an open water class thinking 46 lbs. of weight was appropriate. In my open water classes, we tested our buoyancy adding weight in 2-pound increments. When I'm in fresh water with a full size farmer john style wetsuit, boots, gloves, and BCD, I only need 10 lbs of weight to mainting my buoyancy.

Not saying this was the case but if we put you in sea water you will need more weight then if we add a dry suite more weight. I think I have heard on the board that diving dry adds a lot of weight...maybe some of the dry divers can tell us what kind of weight is used.
 
cdiver2:
Look At the dates undercurrent 1998 seasabres 2003 did we need a second post showing the same thing
I think they were just looking for further confirmation of some of these bizarre sounding deaths even if the link leads to a newer resource/reprint.

Even so, shame to see those deaths, people really need to think. About half of those examples were about weight, the other half or so seemed to be about not having things hooked up, with a few other cases in there. All you need as ditchable weight is the amount equivalent to the gas you are using and be weighted to be neutral near the surface at a low tank pressure - sure many of you have heard this before, but people (at least these fatal examples) dont seem to be doing it.
 
cdiver2:
A very intresting read taken from Yorkshire divers board= undercurrent

Interesting reading

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Why Divers Die
Part V- problems with gear
From the September, 1998 issue of Undercurrent...

.

What I took away from the original post was that most divers die because they are relatively inexperienced, and diving in more stressing conditions than they should be. Most new divers are at best marginally prepared for safe diving after the basic open water course. That is the result of the brevity of most courses. That is not meant to be agency bashing and in fact it is driven primarily by economic choices the divers taking the classes make. That said I do think the training agencies could do a better job in explaining what new divers should be doing on their own to gain experience. That should include guidelines for what should be practiced, the number of practice dives and recommended depths and conditions. I think the usual guideline for new divers to stay above 60 FSW is really too deep. The first 15 or 20 dives made should be done in shallow water, say less than 30 feet, in non-challenging conditions. The guidance the training agencies provide "not to dive beyond your experience" is really unhelpful. Essentially all dives new divers do are beyond their experience. New divers will make mistakes, and will feel stressed by the diving environment. But if those mistakes are made in at 20 FSW they are much more likely to be survivable than if they are made at 60 FSW.

If divers did 15 or 20 post certification dives with a list of things to practice, and skills to work on, few of the fatalities mentioned above would have happened. That would be enough time to gain comfort in the water and sort out things like weighting, trim, buoyancy control, and gear setup. Those dives should happen in shallow, calm, conditions where it is hard to hurt yourself.

The other thing that was recurrently mentioned in the original post was failure to drop the weights was a cause of many fatalities. I view this as secondary since basic skill and comfort was the root cause of most the fatalities. Yes weights should be dropped in an emergency, but it is generally a last recourse, and one that can lead to dangerous accents. Most people put too much weight on their belts, but that is a topic for a different thread.
 

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