Investigating Recreational and Commercial Diving Accidents |
Contents
Acknowledgements | xiii |
Skin Diving or Free Diving | 26 |
Fins | 39 |
Instruments | 51 |
2222 | 53 |
Breathing Gas Manifolds | 64 |
44 | 66 |
Physiological Factors in Diving Accidents | 77 |
Avoid Criticism or Suggestions | 120 |
Case History Commercial Oilfield Diving | 133 |
Monterey California | 146 |
What to Look for in a Recreational Diving Accident | 159 |
Professional Diving Accidents | 173 |
Common Sites of Commercial Diving Accidents | 186 |
Contaminated Breathing Air | 199 |
Jones Act Seaman Status | 201 |
Helmet Squeeze | 90 |
Investigators Must Be Organized | 94 |
Handheld GPS | 107 |
Case History Recreational Diving | 214 |
Common terms and phrases
agency air diving air sample air supply attorney autopsy Barsky bottom breathing gas buoyancy compensator cameras cause cident commercial diving accidents compressor conduct crew death decompression sickness depth gauge designed dive accident investigator dive boat dive computer dive stores diving bell diving companies diving equipment diving gear diving helmets diving instructor diving job diving operations Diving Professionals diving regulations diving supervisor documents drowning dry suits fatal full-face mask gas mixture high-pressure hose hot water incident inflator injury interview involved kelp low-pressure ment mixed gas normally occur OSHA oxygen person personnel photograph pressure public safety divers rebreather records recreational diving regulator rights reserved saturation diving scientific divers scuba cylinder scuba divers serial numbers snorkel sport diving standards sure surface surface-supplied tion took place topside type of diving U.S. Coast Guard umbilical underwater usually valve vessel victim wetsuit