Thursday, July 10, 2014

Instinctive drowning response



Instinctive drowning response

 
The instinctive drowning response is a set of behaviors automatically undertaken by a person who either is, or is very close to, drowning. These are autonomic responses of the body, undertaken without deliberate control, and "represent a person's final attempts to avoid actual or perceived suffocation in water" before sinking.

Contrary to the normal popularisation of drowning as a highly visible behavior, involving shouting, abrupt or violent movements such as splashing and waving, and visible difficulty—which is a related phenomenon, known as aquatic distress, which often but not always precedes drowning—the "instinctive drowning response" is noiseless and confined to subtle movements.

 Description

While distress and panic may sometimes take place beforehand, drowning itself is deceptively quick and often silent. A person at, or close to, the point of drowning is unable to keep their mouth above water long enough to breathe properly and is unable to shout. Lacking air, their body cannot perform the voluntary efforts involved in waving or seeking attention. Involuntary actions operated by the autonomic nervous system involve lateral flapping or paddling with the arms to press them down into the water in the effort to raise the mouth long enough to breathe, and tilting the head back. As an instinctive reaction, this is not consciously mediated nor under conscious control. The lack of leg movement, upright position, inability to talk or keep the mouth consistently above water, and (upon attempting to reach the victim) the absence of expected rescue-directed actions, are evidence of the condition.

Timing

The instinct takes place for typically no longer than the final 20–60 seconds during drowning and before sinking underwater.In comparison, a person who can still shout and keep their mouth constantly above water may be in distress, but is not in immediate danger of drowning compared to a person unable to do so.

Recognizing drowning

To an untrained observer, it may not be obvious that a drowning person is in distress—they may appear to be swimming safely while within 20–60 seconds of sinking under the surface. Drowning victims generally show no visible panic in their movements, because they quickly become incapable of making noticeable gestures or calling for help. They cannot kick their feet, nor swim to a rescuer, nor grasp a rope or other rescue equipment. They may be misunderstood as "playing in the water" by those unfamiliar with drowning, and other swimmers just meters away may not realize that an emergency is occurring. Lifeguards and other persons trained in rescue learn to recognize drowning people by watching for these instinctive actions.

In emergency situations in which lifeguards or other trained personnel are not present, it is advisable to wait for the victim to stop moving or sink before approaching, rescuing, and attempting to resuscitate. While the instinctive reaction to drowning is taking place, victims latch onto any and all solid objects in attempts for air, which can result in the drowning of a would be rescuer as well as the victim.

The event called 'AVIR Syndrome' (Aquatic Victim Instead of Rescuer) has killed over 100 would be rescuers in Australia and over 80 would be rescuers in New Zealand. In Australia, 86 of these rescuers who drowned were trying to rescue children and they had failed to follow basic rescue safety rules that are easily learned.

 Research and discovery

The common drowning behaviors were identified by Frank Pia based upon study of video footage of actual and near-drownings, and documented in his 1971 instructional video On Drowning, and a 1974 paper[9] Observations on the drowning of nonswimmers.

At the time, it was commonly believed that drowning involved agitated behaviors, although Pia cites an earlier (unspecified) 1966 paper as also observing this was not necessarily the case.

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