Andrea, Vice President of Lifeguard Systems and RIPTIDE, a NAUI & ACUC course director, and a PADI, DAN, and Red Cross Instructor, teaches over 1000 surface rescue and dive personnel annually. She co-authored with Walt Hendrick such videos and books as Ice Diving Operations, Surface Ice Rescue, Scuba Instructor Readiness Series, Field Neurological Evaluations, Public Safety Dive Operations, Blackwater Contingency, and Homicidal Drowning Investigations, was the managing editor of SORTIE Magazine, manages the www.wateroperation.com discussion group, and has over 100 published articles. She is a noted public speaker, award winner, a NYS EMT.
Andrea has been teaching dive teams how to find bodies and evidence since 1987, and co-founded nonprofit RIPTIDE to assist law enforcement with homicidal drowning investigations. She is a medicolegal death investigator with Dutchess County M.E. Office, is a noted author, speaks at Coroner and Forensic conferences nationwide, and has received acknowledgements such as the DAN-Rolex Diver of the Year Award.
Andrea teaches over 1500 police, fire, EMS, and sport diver personnel annually worldwide, in everything from U/W vehicle extrication, instructor-level rescue, field neurological evaluations, to blackwater searching. She co-authored with Walt Hendrick such videos and books as Surface Ice Rescue, Scuba Instructor Readiness Series, Field Neurological Evaluations, Public Safety Dive Operations, Blackwater Contingency, and Homicidal Drowning Investigation. Vice President of Lifeguard Systems & RIPTIDE, a course director, a noted public speaker, award winner, RIPTIDE e-zine editor, and the www.wateroperation.com on-line discussion group manager, she is one of the leading trainers in the water rescue and recovery industry today. Her main mission is to keep you alive and well. Send questions/comments az@teamlgs.com
Public Safety Diver Intensive One Day Workshop
The words "rescue diving" and "recovery diving" have many meanings in the dive industry, and are too often misunderstood for the job at hand. The majority of public safety dive teams are trained by sport Instructors who have no understanding of a dive teams needs, or by sport instructors who are also members of dive teams and thereby call themselves public safety diver instructors. In either case, students often do not learn what they need to be safe and effective. The number one cause of public safety diver fatality is the use of recreational procedures or equipment.
Public safety rescue diving means unexpected dives all hours of the night under all weather conditions, solo divers on tethers with top side back-up divers and tenders, potential contamination problems, high risk entanglement and entrapment environments, intense psychological stresses, black water as well as an unusual lack of diving experience on the part of the average public safety diver.
Instructors who train, or plan on training, public safety divers must fully understand harnesses, multiple cutting tools, quick release pony bottles, line handling, tender and profiler protocols, underwater extrication tools, full face masks, contingency lines and much more. Students learn how to dive on the bottom in non recreational environments that are filled with potentially dangerous debris, contaminants, black water, vehicles, currents, high or low temperatures and potential avalanches. Instructors must understand the difference between rescues and recovery, and know when the job is too dangerous for the divers at hand. Teams must learn how to keep themselves liability safe, allowing them the right to say "no", because the name of the game is when the job is done, you need to be able to go home.
This workshop combines lectures and hands-on drills with many different pieces of professional rescue equipment. It is an intense and dynamic programThe following are a few of the many questions addressed during the one day program.
The following are a few of the many questions we will address during the one day program:
Does the team have a specific, proven planned and practiced system of communication and procedures between the back-up diver and primary diver in a blackwater emergency situation?
Is the team using the older, less effective and less safe system of more than one diver down in low or no visibility water, or does the team put one diver down with a fully ready, tethered back-up diver and a 90% ready diver on shore/boat.
Does the team have 90% ready back-up divers ready to take the position of a back-up diver who for whatever reason can not make it down to a primary diver in need?
Does it usually take the team more than 30 minutes total operation time to find a small object, such as a carabiner if a witness is available.
Can team members be full dressed, checked out and ready to dive in under three minutes.
Have all divers practiced cutting rope, wire, fishing line, and spider wire™ underwater to prepare for entanglements situation.
Are all divers wearing pony bottles with quick release harnesses and second stages secured in the chest region.
Are all divers carrying a minimum of three cutting tools (1 knife and two shears or wire cutters,) in the chest region - not on a leg.
Do all team members know how to profile a site with witness information and how to profile the diver’s exact movements underwater and know how to prove that divers conducted an effective search.
Are team members trained and practiced how to handle drowning victims from the time they are found underwater until they are in the ambulance.
Are team members trained in witness interviewing, information recording and trifexing?>
Can divers continuously keep a tight line with a good pattern as directed by the tender?
Is EMS always present during training and actual dive calls?
Does EMS take and record the blood pressure of each diver before and after each diver.
Has EMS been trained in dive accident recognition and pre-hospital care?
Were you as a diver given a diving physical examination by your department before joining the team?
Are you required to have annual or regular diving physical examinations to remain a member of the team?
What do you feel is the most difficult part of your job on the dive team?
