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Journal Article

Citation

Lippmann J, Lawrence C, Fock A, Jamieson S. Diving Hyperb. Med. 2018; 48(3): 141-167.

Affiliation

Divers Alert Network Asia-Pacific, Ashburton, Victoria, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society and European Underwater and Baromedical Society)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

30199888

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: An individual case review of known diving-related deaths that occurred in Australia in 2012 was conducted.

METHOD: The case studies were compiled using statements from witnesses and reports of the police and coroners. In each case, the particular circumstances of the accident and details from the post-mortem examination, where available, are provided.

RESULTS: There were 26 reported fatalities (four less than the previous year). Only two of the victims were female (one snorkeller and one scuba diver). Fourteen deaths occurred while snorkelling and/or breath-hold diving, 11 while scuba diving and one diver died while using surface supplied breathing apparatus in a commercial pearl diving setting. Two breath-hold divers likely drowned as a result of apnoeic hypoxia. Cardiac-related issues were thought to have contributed to the deaths of at least three and possibly seven snorkellers and four scuba divers.

CONCLUSIONS: Pre-existing medical conditions; poor organisation, planning and supervision; equipment-related problems; snorkelling or diving alone or with loose buddy oversight and apnoeic hypoxia were features in several deaths in this series.

Copyright: This article is the copyright of the authors who grant Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine a non-exclusive licence to publish the article in electronic and other forms.


Language: en

Keywords

Breath-hold diving; Case reports; Diving deaths; Diving incidents; Scuba; Surface-supply breathing apparatus (SSBA)

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