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<riskdata table="FatalityRates" columns="AgeGroup|Sex|RatePer100000">
Data and risk models are used on the [[Scuba_Diving|main page]].
10-19|Male|7
 
10-19|Female|0
=== Baseline Risk Values ===
20-29|Male|10
 
20-29|Female|0
'''Baseline Fatality Rate:''' '''1.8 deaths per 100,000 DAN members per year.''' This value represents the average annual risk for an active diver who is a DAN member.
30-39|Male|11
* [https://www.google.com/search?q=https://www.diversalertnetwork.org/medical/report/2018-DAN-Annual-Diving-Report-r1.pdf 2018 DAN Annual Diving Report]
30-39|Female|2
 
40-49|Male|22
'''Baseline Decompression Sickness (DCS) Rate:''' '''5 cases per 10,000 dives (0.05%).''' This is a representative rate for recreational, no-decompression dives.
40-49|Female|7
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6159637/ Buzzacott et al., "The epidemiology of injury in diving and hyperbaric medicine."]
50-59|Male|30
 
50-59|Female|16
=== Risk Factors ===
60+|Male|33
 
60+|Female|29
<riskdata table="AgeData" columns="Age_Selector|DCS_Age_Multiplier">
Under 40 years old|1.0
40-49 years old|1.34
50-59 years old|1.81
60+ years old|2.43
</riskdata>
</riskdata>
This table provides fatality rates per 100,000 DAN-insured divers per year, broken down by age group and sex. The timeframe is annual, assuming active diving participation among insured members (typically more committed divers). Note that rates of 0 indicate no fatalities recorded in the study sample for that group, but actual risk may be small rather than zero.
* Denoble PJ, Pollock NW, Vaithiyanathan P, Caruso JL, Dovenbarger JA, Vann RD. Scuba injury death rate among insured DAN members. Diving Hyperb Med. 2008 Dec;38(4):182-8. PMID: 22692749. https://www.dhmjournal.com/images/IndividArticles/38Dec/Denoble_dhm.38.4.182-188.pdf


<riskdata table="ExposureLevels" columns="ExposureLabel|NumberOfYears">
This table provides a risk multiplier for Decompression Sickness based on the diver's age. The risk of DCS increases steadily with age. The baseline is a diver under 40. The multipliers are derived from an odds ratio where the odds of DCS increase by 3% for each year of age.
1 year|1
 
10 years|10
[https://www.google.com/search?q=https://www.uhms.org/images/position-papers/DCS-Risk-Factors-Age-and-Obesity-Are-Associated-With-Increased-Risk-of-Decompression-Sickness-in-Recreational-Divers.pdf Denoble, P.J., et al. "Age and obesity are associated with increased risk of decompression sickness in recreational divers."]
50 years|50
 
<riskdata table="SexData" columns="Sex_Selector|DCS_Sex_Multiplier">
Female|1.0
Male|2.11
</riskdata>
</riskdata>
This table provides options for exposure periods to approximate cumulative risk over multiple years (using linear approximation suitable for small probabilities). No specific source, as it is for user selection.


<riskmodel name="FatalityRisk" calculation="RatePer100000 / 100000 * NumberOfYears">Your scuba diving fatality risk is about {{One_In_X|{result}}} over the selected exposure period.</riskmodel>
This table provides a risk multiplier for DCS based on the diver's biological sex. After adjusting for other factors, males were found to have a significantly higher risk of DCS than females in a large study of recreational divers. Female is used as the baseline.
 
[https://www.google.com/search?q=https://www.uhms.org/images/position-papers/DCS-Risk-Factors-Age-and-Obesity-Are-Associated-With-Increased-Risk-of-Decompression-Sickness-in-Recreational-Divers.pdf Denoble, P.J., et al. "Age and obesity are associated with increased risk of decompression sickness in recreational divers."]
 
<riskdata table="ProfileData" columns="Profile_Selector|DCS_Profile_Multiplier">
Stayed within No-Decompression Limits|1.0
Required mandatory decompression stops|10.0
</riskdata>
 
This table adjusts DCS risk based on the dive profile. A standard recreational dive does not require mandatory decompression stops. Dives that do (often called "technical" dives) involve significantly more nitrogen exposure and have a substantially higher risk of DCS. The 10x multiplier is an estimate reflecting this well-established, significant increase in risk.
 
[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK537264/ Pollock, N.W. "Decompression Sickness."]
 
=== Risk Models ===
 
<riskmodel name="FatalityRisk" calculation="1.8/100000">Your annual risk of a fatal incident is {{One_In_X|{result}}} per year.</riskmodel>
 
The fatality risk model is based on the annual fatality rate observed among Divers Alert Network (DAN) members, which represents an active and safety-conscious diving population. This model does not include interactive factors and reflects an average risk over a year of diving.
 
<riskmodel name="DCSRisk" calculation="(5/10000) * DCS_Age_Multiplier * DCS_Sex_Multiplier * DCS_Profile_Multiplier">Your risk of Decompression Sickness (DCS) is {{One_In_X|{result}}} per dive.</riskmodel>
 
The calculation starts with a baseline risk of 5 incidents per 10,000 recreational dives. This base rate is then adjusted by multipliers for age, biological sex, and the dive profile to estimate the risk for a single dive.


Initially created by Grok 4.
Initially created by Gemini 1.5.
Data and risk models are used on the [[Scuba Diving|main page]].

Revision as of 18:03, 13 September 2025

Data and risk models are used on the main page.

Baseline Risk Values

Baseline Fatality Rate: 1.8 deaths per 100,000 DAN members per year. This value represents the average annual risk for an active diver who is a DAN member.

Baseline Decompression Sickness (DCS) Rate: 5 cases per 10,000 dives (0.05%). This is a representative rate for recreational, no-decompression dives.

Risk Factors

Age_Selector DCS_Age_Multiplier

Under 40 years old

1.0

40-49 years old

1.34

50-59 years old

1.81

60+ years old

2.43

This table provides a risk multiplier for Decompression Sickness based on the diver's age. The risk of DCS increases steadily with age. The baseline is a diver under 40. The multipliers are derived from an odds ratio where the odds of DCS increase by 3% for each year of age.

Denoble, P.J., et al. "Age and obesity are associated with increased risk of decompression sickness in recreational divers."

Sex_Selector DCS_Sex_Multiplier

Female

1.0

Male

2.11

This table provides a risk multiplier for DCS based on the diver's biological sex. After adjusting for other factors, males were found to have a significantly higher risk of DCS than females in a large study of recreational divers. Female is used as the baseline.

Denoble, P.J., et al. "Age and obesity are associated with increased risk of decompression sickness in recreational divers."

Profile_Selector DCS_Profile_Multiplier

Stayed within No-Decompression Limits

1.0

Required mandatory decompression stops

10.0

This table adjusts DCS risk based on the dive profile. A standard recreational dive does not require mandatory decompression stops. Dives that do (often called "technical" dives) involve significantly more nitrogen exposure and have a substantially higher risk of DCS. The 10x multiplier is an estimate reflecting this well-established, significant increase in risk.

Pollock, N.W. "Decompression Sickness."

Risk Models

  RiskModel: Scuba Diving/Data:FatalityRisk
    Content: Your annual risk of a fatal incident is {{One_In_X|{result}}} per year.

The fatality risk model is based on the annual fatality rate observed among Divers Alert Network (DAN) members, which represents an active and safety-conscious diving population. This model does not include interactive factors and reflects an average risk over a year of diving.

  RiskModel: Scuba Diving/Data:DCSRisk
    Content: Your risk of Decompression Sickness (DCS) is {{One_In_X|{result}}} per dive.

The calculation starts with a baseline risk of 5 incidents per 10,000 recreational dives. This base rate is then adjusted by multipliers for age, biological sex, and the dive profile to estimate the risk for a single dive.

Initially created by Gemini 1.5.