| Literature DB >> 32936817 |
Jasmin C Lawes1,2,3, Eveline J T Rijksen1, Robert W Brander2, Richard C Franklin3, Shane Daw1.
Abstract
Bystanders who drown during a rescue attempt in aquatic waterways are becoming an increasingly important issue within drowning prevention. In the Australian context, the majority of these incidents occur in coastal water ways. This study documents and characterizes bystander rescuer fatalities within Australian coastal waterways that occurred between 1 July 2004 and 30 June 2019 in order to provide suggestions for future public safety interventions involving bystander rescuers. Data was sourced through Surf Life Saving Australia's (SLSA) Coastal Fatality Database, which collates information from multiple sources. Sixty-seven bystander rescuer fatalities in coastal waterways were reported during the 15-year period, an average of 4.5 per year, which is a significant proportion of the five fatalities previously reported across all Australian waterways. The majority of coastal bystander rescuer fatality incidents occurred in the state of New South Wales (49%), at beaches (64%), in regional or remote areas (71%), more than 1 km from the nearest lifesaving service (78%), during summer (45%), in the afternoon (72%), in the presence of rip currents (73%), and did not involve the use of flotation devices to assist rescue (97%). The majority of coastal bystander rescuer victims were Australian residents (88%) born in Australia/Oceania (68%), males (81%), aged between 30-44 years old (36%), visitors to the location (55%), either family (69%) or friends (15%) of the rescuee(s), and were attempting to rescue someone younger than 18 years old (64%). Our results suggest future safety intervention approaches should target males, parents and carers visiting beach locations in regional locations during holiday times and should focus on the importance of flotation devices when enacting a rescue and further educating visitors about the rip current hazard. Future research should examine the psychology of bystander rescue situations and evaluate the effectiveness of different safety intervention approaches.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32936817 PMCID: PMC7494089 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0238317
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Variable categorisation and definitions.
| Incident-related Variables | Definition | Victim-related Variables | Definition | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Categories | Categories | ||||
| NSW | Australian state or territory in which the incident occurred | Male | Gender of bystander (victim) | ||
| VIC | Female | ||||
| QLD | |||||
| WA | 0–17 | Age of bystander (victim) | |||
| SA | 18–29 | ||||
| NT | 30–44 | ||||
| TAS | 45–59 | ||||
| 60+ | |||||
| Major Cities | Remoteness of incident as determined using the Health Workforce Locator (REF) | ||||
| Inner Regional | Swimming/Wading | Activity or primary reason bystander (victim) visited incident location | |||
| Outer Regional | Rock Fishing | ||||
| Remote | Boating | ||||
| Very Remote | Snorkelling/Scuba | ||||
| Land-based Fishing | |||||
| Summer (Dec-Feb) | Season in which incident occurred | Other | |||
| Autumn (Mar-May) | |||||
| Winter (Jun-Aug) | Local (<10km) | Visitor status of bystander (victim), relative to incident location | |||
| Spring (Sep-Nov) | Resident (10-50km) | ||||
| Intrastate (>50km) | |||||
| Morning (6:01–12:00h) | Time incident occurred | Interstate | |||
| Afternoon (12:01–18:00h) | International | ||||
| Evening (18:01–0:00h) | Unknown | ||||
| Night (0:01–6:00h) | |||||
| Alcohol/Drugs | Alcohol/drug contribution to death (coroner report) | ||||
| < 1 km | Distance incident occurred from Surf Lifesaving Service | None | |||
| 1–5 km | |||||
| > 5 km | Australia/Oceania | Continent where bystander (victim) was born | |||
| Asia | |||||
| Beach | Coastal location type where incident occurred | Europe | |||
| Rocks/Cliff | Unknown | ||||
| Offshore | |||||
| Bay | Australia | Continent where bystander (victim) resided | |||
| Marina/Jetty | Asia | ||||
| Europe | |||||
| Yes | Presence of a rip current reported at time of incident | Unknown | |||
| No | |||||
| Unknown | Family/Spouse | Relationship or level of familiarity between bystander (victim) and rescuee | |||
| Friend | |||||
| Yes | Use of flotation device by bystander (victim) | Stranger | |||
| No | Other | ||||
| Weekend day | Whether incident occurred on weekday or weekend | Child (<18) | Age of rescuee | ||
| Weekday | Adult (18+) | ||||
| Other/Unknown | |||||
* Shows variables that were excluded from analyses.
Fig 1Annual percentage of coastal fatal bystander rescues in Australia by gender per financial year (July 1 to June 30) with crude fatality rate per 100,000 population between 1st July 2004 and 30th June 2019.
Descriptive analyses of fatal coastal bystander rescue incidents.
| Incident-related Variables | Annual average (%) | Expected Proportion (%) | Test statistic (p-value) | Victim-related Variables | Annual average (%) | Expected Proportion (%) | Test statistic (p-value) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NSW | 2.2 (49) | 49 | Male | 3.6 (81) | 50 | ||||
| VIC | 0.73 (16) | 16 | Female | 0.87 (19) | 50 | ||||
| QLD | 0.6 (13) | 13 | |||||||
| WA | 0.33 (7) | 7 | 0–17 | 0.2 (4) | 23 | ||||
| SA | 0.27 (6) | 6 | 18–29 | 1.07 (24) | 17 | ||||
| NT | 0.2 (4) | 4 | 30–44 | 1.6 (36) | 21 | ||||
| TAS | 0.13 (3) | 3 | 45–59 | 1.13 (25) | 19 | ||||
| 60+ | 0.47 (10) | 19 | |||||||
| Major Cities | 1.27 (28) | 70 | |||||||
| Inner Regional | 1.93 (43) | 19 | Swimming/Wading | 3.13 (70) | 36 | ||||
| Outer Regional | 0.87 (19) | 9 | Rock Fishing | 0.33 (7) | 13 | ||||
| Remote/Very Remote | 0.4 (9) | 2 | Boating | 0.27 (6) | 21 | ||||
| Snorkelling/Scuba | 0.27 (6) | 12 | |||||||
| Land-based Fishing | 0.27 (6) | 1 | |||||||
| Summer | 2 (45) | 45 | Other | 0.2 (4) | 16 | ||||
| Autumn | 1.4 (31) | 34 | |||||||
| Winter | 0.2 (4) | 4 | Local | 1.47 (35) | 30 | ||||
| Spring | 0.87 (19) | 19 | Resident | 0.4 (10) | 26 | ||||
| Intrastate | 1.27 (31) | 27 | |||||||
| Morning | 0.67 (15) | 34 | Interstate | 0.53 (13) | 7 | ||||
| Afternoon | 3.2 (72) | 54 | International | 0.47 (11) | 10 | ||||
| Evening | 0.6 (13) | 12 | Unknown | 0.33 ( | |||||
| Night | 0 ( | ||||||||
| None | 3.8 (85) | 77 | |||||||
| < 1 km | 1 (22) | 33 | Alcohol/Drugs | 0.67 (15) | 23 | (p = 0.134) | |||
| 1–5 km | 1.33 (30) | 23 | |||||||
| > 5 km | 2.13 (48) | 44 | Australia/Oceania | 2.73 (68) | 76 | ||||
| Asia | 0.87 (22) | 10 | |||||||
| Beach | 2.87 (64) | 50 | Europe | 0.4 (10) | 11 | ||||
| Rocks/Cliff | 1 (22) | 20 | Unknown | 0.47 ( | |||||
| Offshore | 0.27 (6) | 18 | |||||||
| Bay/ Marina /Jetty | 0.33 (8) | 12 | Australia | 3.87 (88) | 78 | ||||
| Asia | 0.4 (9) | 13 | |||||||
| Europe | 0.27 (6) | 6 | |||||||
| Yes | 3.07 (73) | 23 | Unknown | 0.07 ( | |||||
| No | 1.13 (27) | 77 | |||||||
| Unknown | 0.27 ( | Family | 3.07 (69) | 25 | |||||
| Friend | 0.67 (15) | 25 | |||||||
| Yes | 0.13 (3) | 50 | Stranger | 0.4 (9) | 25 | ||||
| No | 4.33 (97) | 50 | Other | 0.33 (7) | 25 | ||||
| Weekend day | 2.2 (49) | 29 | Child (<18) | 2.73 (64) | 50 | ||||
| Weekday | 2.27 (51) | 71 | Adult (18+) | 1.53 (36) | 50 | ||||
| Other/Unknown | 0.2 ( | ||||||||
* Shows excluded variables, bold text denote significance, subscripts denote analysis method. Annual average is presented for ethical requirements.
a Proportions compared with mean population proportions (2004–19)
b proportions compared against non-rescue incidents (2004–19)
c one-sample binomial analysis
d one-sample chi-square analysis
E shows p-value reported is Fishers Exact Test.
Fig 2Bystander rescue victim age proportions by gender and compared to mean Australian population proportions (2004–19).
Fig 3Remoteness classification of incident locations compared with mean population proportions (2004–19).
Fig 4Activity participating in prior or incident compared to proportion of non-rescue incidents (2004–19).
Fig 5Presence of rip currents in fatal bystander rescues compared with non-rescue incidents.