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Journal Article

Citation

McCool JP, Moran K, Ameratunga SN, Robinson E. Int. J. Aquatic Res. Educ. 2008; 2(1): 7-15.

Affiliation

University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Bowling Green State University)

DOI

10.25035/ijare.02.01.02

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Little is known about the specific water-safety beliefs, swimming skills, and behaviors that might be associated with beachgoers' perception of drowning risk. New Zealand adult beachgoers (N = 3,371) were surveyed to assess beach swimming frequency, swimming skill, swimming behaviors, and perception of the risk of drowning in five prevalidated scenarios. Thirty-two percent of beachgoers estimated that they could currently swim less than 25 m, 55% reported that they had swum outside lifeguard-patrolled areas, and 26% had swum after consuming alcohol. Young adults and men were more likely to self-report strong swimming skill, more frequent at-risk swimming behavior, and lower perception of drowning risk. High swimming frequency, better self-reported swimming skill, and previous at-risk swimming behaviors were all associated with a lower perception of risk of the case scenarios. Addressing tendencies to overestimate swimming skill and underestimate drowning risk should be focal points of drowning-prevention interventions, especially among young male adults.

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