Water-Related Injuries: Fact Sheet
How big is the
problem?
- In 2005, there were 3,582 fatal unintentional drownings in the
United States, averaging ten deaths per day. An additional 710
people died, from drowning and other causes, in boating-related
incidents.1, 2
- More than one in four fatal drowning victims are children 14
and younger.1 For every child who dies from drowning, another four
received emergency department care for nonfatal submersion
injuries.1
- Nonfatal drownings can cause brain damage that may result in
long-term disabilities including memory problems, learning
disabilities, and permanent loss of basic functioning (i.e.,
permanent vegetative state).
Who is most at
risk?
- Males: In 2005, males were four times more
likely than females to die from unintentional drownings in the
United States.1
- Children: In 2005, of all children 1 to 4
years old who died, almost 30% died from drowning.1
Although drowning rates have slowly declined,1, 3 fatal
drowning remains the second-leading cause of unintentional
injury-related death for children ages 1 to 14 years.4
- Minorities:
- Between 2000 and 2005, the fatal unintentional drowning rate
for African Americans across all ages was 1.3 times that of whites.
For American Indians and Alaskan Natives, this rate was 1.8 times
that of whites.1
- Rates of fatal drowning are notably higher among these
populations in certain age groups. The fatal drowning rate of
African American children ages 5 to 14 is 3.2 times that of white
children in the same age range. For American Indian and Alaskan
Native children, the fatal drowning rate is 2.4 times higher than
for white children.1
- Factors such as the physical environment (e.g., access to
swimming pools) and a combination of social and cultural issues
(e.g., valuing swimming skills and choosing recreational
water-related activities) may contribute to the racial differences
in drowning rates. If minorities participate less in water-related
activities than whites, their drowning rates (per exposure) may be
higher than currently reported.5
- What are the major risk factors? Lack of
barriers and supervision. Children under one year most often drown
in bathtubs, buckets, or toilets.6 Among children ages 1
to 4 years, most drownings occur in residential swimming pools.6
Most young children who drowned in pools were last seen in the
home, had been out of sight less than five minutes, and were in the
care of one or both parents at the time.7 Barriers, such
as pool fencing, can help prevent children from gaining access to
the pool area without caregivers’ awareness.8
- Age and recreation in natural water settings (such as
lakes, rivers, or the ocean). The percent of drownings in
natural water settings increases with age. Most drownings in those
over 15 years of age occur in natural water settings.9
- Lack of appropriate choices in recreational
boating. In 2006, the U.S. Coast Guard received reports
for 4,967 boating incidents; 3,474 boaters were reported injured,
and 710 died. Among those who drowned, 9 out of ten were not
wearing life jackets. Most boating fatalities from 2006 (70%) were
caused by drowning; the remainder were due to trauma, hypothermia,
carbon monoxide poisoning, or other causes. Open motor boats were
involved in 45% of all reported incidents, and personal watercraft
were involved in another 24%.2
- Alcohol use. Alcohol use is involved in up to
half of adolescent and adult deaths associated with water
recreation and about one in five reported boating
fatalities.10, 11 Alcohol influences balance,
coordination, and judgment, and its effects are heightened by sun
exposure and heat.12
- Seizure disorders. For persons with seizure
disorders, drowning is the most common cause of unintentional
injury death, with the bathtub as the site of highest drowning
risk.13
What has CDC research
found?
A CDC study about self-reported swimming ability14
found that:
- Younger respondents reported greater swimming ability than
older respondents;
- Self-reported ability increased with level of education (i.e.,
high school graduate, college graduate, etc.);
- Among racial groups, African Americans reported the most
limited swimming ability; and
- Men of all ages, races, and educational levels consistently
reported greater swimming ability than women.
Details about additional studies and their findings are
highlighted in the Water-Related Injuries:
CDC Activities fact sheet.
How can water-related
injuries be prevented?
To help prevent water-related injuries:1,
8, 9, 12, 13
- Designate a responsible adult to watch young children while in
the bath and all children swimming or playing in or around water.
Adults should not be involved in any other distracting activity
(such as reading, playing cards, talking on the phone, or mowing
the lawn) while supervising children.
- Always swim with a buddy. Select swimming sites that have
lifeguards whenever possible.
- Avoid drinking alcohol before or during swimming, boating, or
water skiing. Do not drink alcohol while supervising children.
- Learn to swim. Be aware that the American Academy of Pediatrics
does not recommend swimming classes as the primary means of
drowning prevention for children younger than 4. Constant, careful
supervision and barriers such as pool fencing are necessary even
when children have completed swimming classes.
- Learn cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). In the time it might
take for paramedics to arrive, your CPR skills could make a
difference in someone’s life. CPR performed by bystanders has
been shown to improve outcomes in drowning victims.
- Do not use air-filled or foam toys, such as “water
wings”, “noodles”, or inner-tubes, in place of
life jackets (personal flotation devices). These toys are not
designed to keep swimmers safe.
If you have a swimming pool at home:
- Install a four-sided, isolation pool fence that completely
separates the house and play area of the yard from the pool area.
The fence should be at least 4 feet high. Use self-closing and
self-latching gates that open outward with latches that are out of
reach of children. Also, consider additional barriers such as
automatic door locks or alarms to prevent access or notify you if
someone enters the pool area.
- Remove floats, balls and other toys from the pool and
surrounding area immediately after use. The presence of these toys
may encourage children to enter the pool area or lean over the pool
and potentially fall in.
If you are in or around natural bodies of
water:
- Know the local weather conditions and forecast before swimming
or boating. Strong winds and thunderstorms with lightning strikes
are dangerous.
- Use U.S. Coast Guard approved life jackets when boating,
regardless of distance to be traveled, size of boat, or swimming
ability of boaters.
- Know the meaning of and obey warnings represented by colored
beach flags.
- Watch for dangerous waves and signs of rip currents (e.g. water
that is discolored and choppy, foamy, or filled with debris and
moving in a channel away from shore). If you are caught in a rip
current, swim parallel to shore; once free of the current, swim
toward shore.
References
1Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National
Center for Injury Prevention and Control. Web-based Injury
Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) [online]. (2008)
[cited 2008 March 23]. Available from: URL:
www.cdc.gov/ncipc/wisqars.
2U.S. Coast Guard, Department of Homeland Security
(US). Boating Statistics – 2006 [online]. 2008. [cited 2008
March 26]. Available from URL:
www.uscgboating.org/statistics/Boating_Statistics_2006.pdf.
3Branche CM. What is happening with drowning rates in
the United States% In: Fletemeyer JR and Freas SJ, editors.
Drowning: New perspectives on intervention and prevention. Boca
Raton (FL): CRC Press LLC; 1999.
4Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Swimming
and Recreational Water Safety. In: Health Information for
International Travel 2005-2006. Atlanta: US Department of Health
and Human Services, Public Health Service, 2005. 5 Branche CM,
Dellinger AM, Sleet DA, Gilchrist J, Olson SJ. Unintentional
injuries: the burden, risks and preventive strategies to address
diversity. In: Livingston IL, editor. Praeger handbook of Black
American health (2nd edition): Policies and issues behind
disparities in health. Westport (CT): Praeger Publishers; 2004. p.
317-27.
6 Brenner RA, Trumble AC, Smith GS, Kessler EP,
Overpeck MD. Where children drown, United States, 1995. Pediatrics
2001;108(1):85–9.
7Present P. Child drowning study. A report on the
epidemiology of drowning in residential pools to children under age
five. Washington (DC): Consumer Product Safety Commission (US);
1987.
8U. S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. Safety
barrier guidelines for home pools [online]. [cited 2007 Mar 21].
Available from URL: www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/pubs/pool.pdf.
9Gilchrist J, Gotsch K, Ryan GW. Nonfatal and Fatal
Drownings in Recreational Water Settings—United States, 2001
and 2002. MMWR 2004;53(21):447–52.
10Howland J, Mangione T, Hingson R, Smith G, Bell N.
Alcohol as a risk factor for drowning and other aquatic injuries.
In: Watson RR, editor. Alcohol and accidents. Drug and alcohol
abuse reviews. Vol 7. Totowa (NJ): Humana Press, Inc.; 1995.
11Howland J, Hingson R. Alcohol as a risk factor for
drownings: A review of the literature (1950–1985). Accident
Analysis and Prevention 1988;20(1):19–25.
12Smith GS, Kraus JF. Alcohol and residential,
recreational, and occupational injuries: A review of the
epidemiologic evidence. Annual Rev of Public Health
1988;9:99–121.
13Quan L, Bennett E, Branche C. Interventions to
prevent drowning. In Doll L, Bonzo S, Mercy J, Sleet D (Eds).
Handbook of injury and violence prevention. New York: Springer,
2007
14 Gilchrist J, Sacks JJ, Branche
CM. Self-reported swimming ability in U.S. adults, 1994. Public
Health Reports 2000;115(2–3):110–1.
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