Dive Master’s Quick Accident Response Slates
(How to build them)
For obvious reasons dive
accidents happen mainly on boats or remote locations, far away from hospitals
or any other medical aid, therefore the first aid provided at the dive
site can make the difference between a serious accident and a minor event.
Many of us are not well prepared to provide,
or remember the necessary steps required to aid someone in a rescue situation,
even though we’ve been through first aid courses. The issue is that (luckily)
we just don’t do it often enough to get everything out of the top of the
head when we need to.
The trick here is to be prepared and
carry the necessary information with you all times when you go diving.
For that there are a bunch of sources, but in my opinion the Quick Accident
Response from Dr Ernest Campbell is the best. So I rewrote his document
in a more practical form factor for divers. Water being an adverse environment
to paper the best practical solutions is to adopt a slate approach to the
problem, much like your dive tables and stuff them in your bag or first
aid kit.
The creation of the slates is pretty
easy, you just need to print out the diveslates.pdf
document
using a page size of Letter, fold them in the middle and cover them with
transparent adhesive plastic.
What do you need to create the slates?
1.A
computer :-)
2.The
diveslates.pdf file
3.The
Adobe Acrobat Reader
4.A
printer, the document is in color so if you have a color printer at hand,
use it, you will get better results.
5.The
highest grade paper your printer can support
6.Transparent
adhesive plastic
7.Last
but not least, a brain :-)
After downloading the document and opening
it in Acrobat, you’ll have to do the following:
1.Read
the disclaimer carefully and decide if agree with it
2.Open
the File menu and select Page Setup
3.Check
if the paper size is Letter and the orientation is Portrait, click Ok
4.Open
the File menu again and select Print and after the print pop up window
shows up select the printer you want to use and click OK
5.The
computer genius stuff is over now!
6.Now
that you have the printed version of the document you just need to fold
each page in the middle carefully. If you used high-grade paper it should
be hard enough to handle the future “pain” of the dive bag.
7.Complete
the information on the slates writing down on page 2 your Local Emergency
Phones.
8.That
being done, you need to wrap all the slates with the adhesive plastic to
make them harder and water tight.
9.To
make them easier to use I made a hole in the top left corner of the slates
and used a stainless steel ring to hold them together.
That is it, you’re ready to hit the water!
Diving is a beautiful sport,
and a safe one too, as long as we dive well within our limits, have the
right equipment and know the rules of the game. Keeping a healthy fit body
and having a responsible mindset is the first step to enjoy it for many
years to come.
Don’t forget that being a safer diver makes you a
better diver.
Have
fun
Pedro Paixão