Title: Water safety data; what are the figures telling us?
1Water safety data what are the figures telling
us?
- Holly Henderson
- RoSPA Research Manager and Postgraduate of the
- Department of Public Health and Epidemiology,
University of Birmingham
2Statistics Overview
- Accidental injury is a leading cause of death and
disability and by 2020 injury will be the largest
single reason for the loss of healthy human life
years (WHO 2001 Towner 2001). - Drowning is the second leading cause of
unintentional injury mortality globally behind
road traffic injuries. - WHO (2002) estimates globally that there are
almost half a million drownings annually - Global Fatality Rate of 7.4 per 100, 000
- Historically the UK has published a drowning
fatality rate of 1.0 per 100,000
3(No Transcript)
4What new research has occurred in 2004?
- SAPC and the University of Strathclyde Scottish
Water Based Accidents The development of an
accurate database - University of Wales College of Medicine A
retrospective study of childhood swimming pool
drowning deaths in the UK and abroad - SWIM Group Bath Seat Study
- University of Birmingham An investigation into
the epidemiological surveillance of inland water
incidents in the UK - RYA Entrapment Study
5Scottish Water Based Fatalities The Development
of and accurate database
- Retrospective data collected from 1997 2003
- Four Data Sources
- Data includes suicides, homicides, coastal,
offshore, inland and domestic fatalities - Number of Notifications 1490 fatalities
- Total after data linkage 1116 fatalities
- New data collected 2.5 times more fatalities than
previously known
6SAPC and University of Strathclyde Results (1)
Year RoSPA / RLSS Database SAPC Database
2003 67 165 (est.)
2002 66 173
2001 63 161
2000 64 156
1999 86 157
1998 93 182
1997 66 160
Mean 72 165
7SAPC and University of Strathclyde Results (2)
8SAPC and University of Strathclyde Results (3)
9SAPC and University of Strathclyde Results (4)
10Research Summary
- Over 100 additional drownings reported annually
- Males accounted for 80.5
- Age groups of concern 35 39 (8.6) and 55-59
(8.3) - Drownings peaked in August (10)
- 58.3 of fatalities at inland water locations
- 33.4 land based activities, 27.7 on the water
- Fishing accounted for 19.3
- 13.3 of fatalities in the Highlands Region
- 34.1 intent undetermined, 26.1 no information
available - New rate of 3.2 per 100,000
11A retrospective study of childhood swimming pool
drownings in the UK and Abroad
- Data sourced from 1993 2003
- Domestic, Private and Public Pools
- Total of 137 children (under 15) died
- 69.3 Males
- Average age 6.1 years
- Average of 12 per year
12University of Wales College of Medicine (1)
13University of Wales College of Medicine (2)
14University of Wales College of Medicine (3)
15University of Wales College of Medicine (4)
16Research Summary
- Drowning in the UK
- Starting to decline but age increasing
- Managing of Health and Safety of Swimming Pools
- Overhaul of Pool Life guarding
- Child Admissions Policy
- Drowning Abroad
- On the increase
- Exposure
- ANEC Research 2005
17Drowning of babies in bath seats
- Children under the age of two
- Case Study of drowning and near drowning episodes
from 1989 2003 - All males (n 6)
- 5 under a year old
- Bath seats appear to give a false sense of
security to parents - Further research required to look at and address
exposure to risk
18An Investigation into the Epidemiological
Surveillance of Inland Water Incidents in the UK
- 2545 notifications
- 2068 isolated incidents
- Related to 2743 people
- 89.4 (2453) rescued, 10.6 (290) died
- 79.0 involved were male (7.6 per 100, 000)
- 88.9 who died were male (0.9 per 100, 000)
- Males had a 7.6 fold increased risk of dying at
an inland water location in the UK - Males had a 3.9 fold increased risk in needing
rescue at an inland water location in the UK
19Gender and Age - Survivability
- Adults accounted for 80.8 of involvement and
88.6 of fatalities - Teenagers had the highest population based rate
of involvement (8.1 per 100, 000) - Once involved in an inland water incident males
were twice as likely to die
20Incidents Resulting in a Fatality Monthly Trends
21Incident Start Time and Month by the Number of
People Involved
22Incidents Resulting in a Fatality Day of Week
Trends
23Incident Day of Week and Month by the Number of
People Involved
24Incident Day of Week and Incident Start Time by
the Number of People Involved
25By Location
26By Activity
27Multivariate Analysis
- Predictive model used by NHS and Public Health
Specialists - Considers factors associated and predictors
- Model predicted 98.8 of outcomes of the research
- LOGODDS -1.827 0.590 AGR (2) 1.627 AGR
(3) 1.474 WKD (6) 1.837 WKD (5) 0.093
WKD (4) - 0.016 WKD (3) 0.049 WKD (2)
0.599 GEN (1) 1.655 LT (2) 3.968 LT (1)
28Research Summary
- First time incident data analysed for the UK
- Use of descriptive epidemiology
- Capture Recapture Analysis (n 228)
- New use of relative risk, odds ratios and
multivariate analysis - Creates a new population based rate for inland
waters in the UK - Identification of Population most at risk
- Provides a baseline for prevention and
intervention strategies through education and
resource deployment
29Entrapment Study
- Study started in 2003
- Due to the public concern regarding the risk of
getting trapped in inverted or partially inverted
dinghy - Well publicised near misses
- Process
- Logging entrapment incidents (Web Report)
- Discussions with major dinghy manufacturers
- Air gap tests
- Rescue Techniques
- Methods of Prevention
30Incident Records
- 44 incidents logged during 2003 and 2004
- 41 of these reported incidents were serious and
a potential threat to life - Biggest risk results from complete inversion of
the boat with the sailor tangled or stuck
underneath - Probability of inversion occurring unaffected by
conditions - Major Factor - Speed of Inversion
- Depends on design
- Capsizing to windward whilst sailing downwind
31NWSF Information Group
- Aim
- To bring together in one place, information and
research about incidents, casualties and
fatalities in water - Improve the quality of information and data
available enabling it, for the first time, to
develop strategies and policies based on
statistics, analysis and research - Objectives
- To encourage the gathering, monitoring and
evaluation of drowning/incident data and relevant
research - To assess the need for intervention
- To assess the need for better information and
data
32NWSF Information Group
- Outputs
- Improvements to statistics and levels of analysis
- Regular reporting to the Co-ordinating committee
- A data led approach to drowning prevention
- Contributors
- Nominated person from each of the NWSF Advisory
Groups - Academics with specialist interest in water safety
33Finally
- Each of the research projects has brought new
valid and credible knowledge into the water
safety community - Collecting data routinely and the appropriate
analysis is key to success - Organisational understanding of data and
statistical analysis - Dataset Development
- Data Linkage Strategy
- Reporting Mechanisms
- Population based and risk based analysis
- Development of a Hierarchy of Evidence
- The NWSF Information Group will help co-ordinate
and facilitate research like this in the future