Findings and Recommendations: Safety Issues
Multi-Institutional Cruises
Findings
- The process of preparing for a diving cruise involves a discrete
number of invariable steps, interlaced with project specific requirements.
The process includes: selection of the lead institution; documentation
that all research diver certification requirements have been met;
research diver review and approval process; and an initial letter
from the lead institution's campus diving administration to the
ship operator documenting the above.
- The process is brought to the ship at the beginning of the
cruise in a full-scale meeting between the On-Board Diving Supervisor,
the vessel's Master, and the Chief Scientist, together with appropriate
others such as the Marine Superintendent (if available).
Recommendations
- A formal walk-through of the ship's equipment that the research
divers will need (e.g., small boats, crane) with the Master, Chief
Engineer, Diving Safety Officer, On-Board Diving Supervisor, Marine
Superintendent and the Principal Investigator prior to a cruise
is highly desirable.
- Through a procedure not dissimilar to that used for ALVIN
proposals, the grant proposal, as written, should specify to the
greatest extent possible details of the planned diving including
the divers, the institutions, the ship (by class and preferably
by name), the time, the location, the specialized and routine
equipment required, the costs to be uniquely attributed to the
diving operation, and an outline of an emergency plan. This could
be assisted by requiring the attachment of a completed Pre-Cruise
Dive Plan Form.
- Prior to the submission of the grant proposal, the Principal
Investigator should work out with the desired ship operator and
the respective campus diving administrations the details of the
planned diving as outlined above.
- The description of the process described above and the Pre-cruise
Dive Plan Form should be incorporated into appropriate NSF, UNOLS
and RVOC documents.
- Uniformity across the fleet in the requirements placed on
diving cruises is highly desirable.
Small Boats and Small Boat Operators
Findings
- Most vessel operators have small boat operation rules and
regulations. However, when viewed from a fleet-wide perspective,
these are not generally available, complete, or consistent with
each other especially as they relate to at-sea diving support.
- A common standard should include operator requirements (training,
certification, proficiencies, etc.), operational procedures (launch
and recovery, diver assistance, support and communication, special
diving conditions, etc.), dive planning involvement, a detailed
checklist, and emergency procedures.
- The primary boat operator should normally be a member of the
ship's crew. Science party operators must demonstrate, to the
vessel Master's satisfaction, acceptable skills and knowledge.
Having a boat operator with diving knowledge is useful to both
the ship and the science party and should be encouraged.
Recommendations
- UNOLS/RVOC should develop a common set of guidelines for small
boats and their operators, not unlike (in form) the standards
AAUS developed for research diving. These guidelines should be
incorporated, as appropriate, into the UNOLS Shipboard Safety
Standards, the RVOC Safety Training Manual and other UNOLS/RVOC
documents. These new guidelines should include coverage of the
use of small boats for diving operations. Small boat topics that
relate to diving should be incorporated into the documents mentioned
above in both the small boat and diving sections.
- Small boats from which diving operations are conducted should,
as a high priority consideration, always be equipped with a way
of rapidly recalling the divers to the surface in an efficient
manner.
Diver Evaluation and Training Standards
Findings
- Shipboard diving, when compared to near-shore diving conducted
from small boats, requires additional diving skills and knowledge
on the part of the scientific party as well as additional skills
and knowledge on the part of the ships' crew. The assumption that
all members of such expeditions have been adequately trained and
indoctrinated in the tasks to be performed may not always be valid.
It is imperative that all personnel involved in the diving operation
have a clear understanding of the tasks to be performed, how they
are to be accomplished and who the responsible individual is.
- The responsibility for the establishment of minimum standards
for qualifying and training scientific divers, as well as running
research diving safety programs, rests with AAUS. The implementation
of those standards rests with the campus diving administrations.
AAUS standards cover basic diver training but do not directly
address day-to-day shipboard scientific diving operations.
- It is not uncommon for diving cruises to include diving personnel
from institutions other than the vessel operator. It is sometimes
difficult for foreign divers and divers from institutions which
lack an AAUS model research diving safety program to demonstrate
their qualification for research diving cruises.
Recommendations
- When a cruise is leaving from a port other than the home port,
and there are research divers meeting the ship who are not yet
qualified, inclusion of the Diving Safety Officer (or an authorized
representative) in the scientific party as the On Board Diving
Supervisor is the preferable mode of operation. This approach
permits the On-Board Diving Supervisor to conduct the required
in-water checkouts of the divers and to qualify them on the spot.
When this approach is used, research divers need to consider that
they will not be permitted to dive if they do not meet the qualification
criteria.
- The development of common policy approaches, evaluation criteria,
and protocol for the testing of the proficiency of shipboard scientific
divers and support personnel is needed. Consensus standards covering
these items should be developed.
- All UNOLS members whose scientists carry out diving research
or who operate a UNOLS research vessel should be Organizational
Members of the AAUS so that they can fully participate in the
development and evolution of research diving safety standards.
Emergency Planning
Findings
- Masters and mates are prepared to respond to life-threatening
events at sea on an ad hoc basis.
- Diving cruises require specific plans to deal with medical
advisory communication, evacuation, and location of operational
hyperbaric chambers that have medical support.
- Available chamber location information receives little distribution
even though it is useful in operational area planning.
Recommendations
- The On-Board Diving Supervisor should be given primary responsibility
for the assembly of the information and protocols that go into
the Pre-cruise Dive Plan.
- If an accident occurs, the Master of the main vessel has the
responsibility for establishing communication with pre-defined
medical advisory personnel. Both the scientific party and the
ship's crew should understand how to communicate with the agencies
involved in medical emergency and rescue.
- Research divers (working with the vessel EMT when present)
should be prepared to deal with oxygen administration and emergency
management.
- Emergency drills should be held on vessels conducting diving
operations.
- With the appropriate approval of UNOLS, an emergency planning
file should be established at the UNOLS office. The file would
contain past emergency plans including information on medical
and evacuation support, recompression facilities, response chart
documenting 'response-radius' of the evacuation facilities and
other emergency contacts. An on-line computer data base that keeps
track of the plans in the file should be an integral part of this
project.
- As part of a diving cruise emergency plan, the On-Board Diving
Supervisor must include details concerning: contacting medical
advisory groups; evacuation procedures; diving operations; and
emergency chain of command, including 'first-responder aid' communication.
A 'response-radius' chart should also be prepared. A copy of all
emergency plan documentation should be sent to the UNOLS office
for inclusion in the Emergency Plan file.
- General cruise emergency planning would benefit from documentation
in existing UNOLS and RVOC marine safety publications.
Recompression Chambers
Findings
- A review of the history of academic research diving does not
justify requirement of on-board recompression chambers.
- Chambers may be desirable for diving techniques/equipment
that are outside the current practices of the scientific diving
community .
- Of the chambers available, a double lock multi-place unit
is the superior choice
Recommendations
- Normal at-sea scientific diving from UNOLS vessels does not
require provision or use of an on-board recompression chamber.
- Diving beyond the experienced norm, especially in a remote
site, should reviewed on a case-by-case basis as part of the dive
planning process to determine if chamber is warranted
- The general level of emergency medical preparedness should
be enhanced encouraging the training of crew members (and even
interested research divers Emergency Medical Technicians) .
- In-water, oxygen decompression or the use of NITROX should
be evaluated as techniques capable of providing greater safety
margins.