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july digital focus : aquatics safety AB HIGHLIGHTS aquatics safety COVERAGE COMPILED FROM OUR ARCHIVE

AB regularly immerses readers in aquatics coverage. For this month’s Digital Focus, we’ve pulled from our archive a variety of articles related to aquatics safety. With topics ranging from new drowning-prevention technology to products and surfaces designed to keep all pool users safe, you'll find a wealth of information in the presentation below.

New Drowning Simulation App Seeks to Help Lifeguards Hone Skills

By Michael Popke

May is National Water Safety Month — a joint public awareness effort of the World Waterpark Association, the National Recreation and Park Association, the American Red Cross and the Pool & Hot Tub Alliance. But as any aquatics professional will tell you, water safety vigilance is critical every second of every day of every month.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates approximately 11 people die every day from drowning in the United States, and drowning is the leading cause of injury death for children between the ages of 1 and 4. Even non-fatal drownings — which occur when people survive after being underwater for an extended period — can cause brain damage and other serious long-term complications.

It’s all enough to keep facility operators awake at night, and it’s why Tom Griffiths has leveraged more than 40 years of aquatic safety consulting experience to develop an innovative new phone app that allows users to interact with simulated lifeguard scenarios. Dubbed “Dr. Tom’s Lifeguard Vision,” the app spent six years in development and is expected to be used by beta-testing facilities this year prior to its full launch. As of this writing, final technical details were being worked out, according to Griffiths, who is president of Aquatic Safety Research Group in State College, Pa., and a frequent AB Show presenter.

“There have been so many lifeguards who miss drowning victims,” Griffiths says. “I kept racking my brain: How can these kids practice detecting and recognizing life-like drowning victims?”

Detection and recognition

Griffiths believes he’s come up with an answer. In partnership with St. Louis-based aquatic design firm Counsilman-Hunsaker and forensics consulting firm DJS Associates in Abington, Pa. (along with app developer Cubix), he created an educational app based on the same principles behind simulation training for vehicle drivers, aircraft pilots and athletes.

Lifeguard Vision will allow aquatic facility operators and managers to encourage (or perhaps even require) lifeguards to hone their skills in both indoor and outdoor settings by monitoring different types of activities and encountering realistic conditions they might face in their daily lifeguard activities. Both active and passive drowning behaviors are simulated using life-like avatars in the water.

When users see an avatar in trouble, they blow a virtual whistle. The app responds by congratulating them and indicating how long it took to detect the victim. If the user misses a drowning, the app buzzes and indicates what was missed. Each simulation lasts about 15 minutes, according to Griffiths, and all avatars and their actions are randomized.

“We have 12 to 15 people in the pool — boys and girls, men and women, people of color — and they randomly show up for different activities, like playing in the shallow end, going off the diving board, swimming laps,” he says. “The drowning scenarios can take place anytime, anyplace. It could be an elderly lap swimmer who slips to the bottom on the turn. It could be a non-swimmer in the deep end holding onto a water noodle that slips away. We tried to re-create actual drowning scenarios we’ve seen on security camera video.”

Facility managers will pay a fee for their lifeguards to use the app, and they’ll be able to monitor successes, identify areas that might need improvement and gather data on overall performance.

It’s not a game, Griffiths stresses, but rather a simulator that allows lifeguards to practice their detection and recognition skills the night before going on duty, or even for five minutes in the breakroom prior to resuming a shift.

“They can train their eyes and their brain to focus on drowning victims, and I truly believe that this will help improve lifeguards’ detection and recognition,” he says. “We’re always telling lifeguards to get off their phones, and now for the first time we’re saying, ‘Get on your phone — but in the right setting and when you’re not actively guarding.’ ”

Lifeguard Vision certainly isn’t the only digital tool that facility operators can use to improve drowning detection and recognition. Such companies as Aqua Conscience, WAVE Systems and AngelEye also offer products in this category.

“Video cameras and computers are vigilant; human beings are not. That’s a fact,” Griffiths says. “So technology is going to be much more effective than the best lifeguards on duty. But everything goes hand in hand, because you still need a lifeguard on duty who must respond. And I think a lifeguard is going to be more alert when a computer is backing them up, because they don’t want to be beat by a computer. If you run a facility that has both the computerized drowning detection system and the app detection system, then you’ve got two great layers of protection in safeguarding your patrons who come to the pool.”

More lifeguards needed

Increasingly, the human component of lifeguarding has become elusive. Nationwide lifeguard shortages exacerbated by the pandemic are expected to continue. In the past, many lifeguards returned to the job year after year, but with outdoor facilities closed in 2020 — and for possibly all or part of 2021 — they found work elsewhere.

This spring, at least one-third of all public pools in the United States were at risk of reducing hours or closing entirely due to a lack of lifeguards, according to the American Lifeguard Association. In Omaha, Neb., for example, 10 of the city’s 15 outdoor swimming pools are expected to operate for only half of the summer’s nine-week season, with the other five pools remaining closed all summer. The situation is similarly dire in cities across the country.

“Regretfully, it’s probably going to be the worst summer,” ALA director Bernard Fisher told Newsweek. “We have 309,000 public pools in the U.S., but we don’t have the youth in the ratio to the population. … We won’t have the staff to do the rotation, or we won’t have the staff we’d like to see. Some of these kids haven’t been in the water in two years. Not only do we have a lifeguard shortage, but now we don’t have enough kids who know how to swim, who can’t become lifeguards in five to 10 years.”

No wonder managers at Indian Land (S.C.) YMCA and other facilities are inviting former lifeguards who are now older adults to take shifts in the lifeguard chair. The Y had at least three lifeguards who would be classified as senior citizens on its staff in April and was looking to hire more.

Smart move, according to Griffiths — and one that could help keep some pools open this summer. “I know that a grandparent is going to be more vigilant than a youngster on duty,” he says. “That grandparent has raised kids and now has grandkids, and so they know from first-hand experience how quickly a child can get into trouble. So I would encourage and urge facilities to look for senior citizens.”

While Griffiths adds that many people in their 50s and 60s can make rescues and deserve a lifeguarding job, he also believes that all lifeguards should be paid more. He notes that the Phoenix (Ariz.) Parks and Recreation Department offered a $2,500 incentive to would-be lifeguards who receive their certification and work the entire 2022 season. The hourly base pay for Phoenix lifeguards is $14.02, according to phoenix.gov.

Changing the perception of the job wouldn’t hurt, either. “Facility operators might want to look at lifeguarding as a resume-builder and include life skills and professional skills in their lifeguarding training,” Griffiths says. “Offer continuing education modules for head guards, and make the job a platform to help kids become more mature and more professional.”

Lifeguard Assistance

Below are two additional companies that offer training tools and drowning-detection systems to help facilities keep patrons safer.

Aqua Conscience

The LPTT® (Lifeguard Positioning and Training Tool) from Aqua Conscience is a full-facility kit used for training lifeguards to scan every cubic foot of water in their surveillance zone, to scientifically audit lifeguard zone boundaries and to validate lifeguard chair height and position. During testing, devices known as ANGELS are placed in a grid formation along the bottom of the pool, providing, a three-dimensional visual reference for conducting a systematic analysis.

Lifeguards count the number of ANGELS devices they can identify during various levels and types of pool activity. As results from the individual zones are compiled, systemic blind spots become apparent, and optimization of surveillance zones is possible, according to the company.

WAVE Systems Inc.

The WAVE Drowning Detection System from WAVE Systems provides an extra layer of safety with wearables that monitor how long each swimmer’s face is fully submerged. The system’s Hub can monitor hundreds of wearables simultaneously, according to the company, and if someone submerges beyond a facility’s predetermined maximum allowable time, WAVE immediately alerts staff members so they can intervene before tragedy strikes. The alerts include vibrating lifeguard bracelets, audiovisual alerts from the system and cellphone alerts. The system is portable and wireless, works in all water types and includes a Lifeguard Entry Alert function that is also available as a standalone system.

This article originally appeared in the May 2022 issue of Athletic Business with the title "New Drowning Simulation App Seeks to Help Lifeguards Hone Skills." Athletic Business is a free magazine for professionals in the athletic, fitness and recreation industry.

Pool Safety Products for Seamless Drowning Prevention

Lifeguards might be considered specialized guardian angels, keeping catastrophe at bay and providing peace of mind for aquatics facility patrons and operators alike. However, lifeguards aren't omniscient beings with supernatural gifts of sight — they are, in many cases, teens or young adults with a high level of personal responsibility and limited authority to make positioning changes to increase their own efficacy.

Drowning Prevention Requires More than Supervision

In a tragic drowning case that did not receive much media attention, a fully clothed six-year-old boy drowned at an annual residential pool party. What made this story unusual was that many precautions were put into place in order to prevent drowning at the event. First and foremost, a lifeguard was hired to watch the children playing in the pool. Secondly, every adult attending the pool party was a medical professional — a doctor, nurse or surgeon.

Slippery Standards: Keeping Patrons Safe on Wet Surfaces

Back in 2010, I was involved in writing the first Model Aquatic Health Code, a federal effort led by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As the only architect involved in the process, I sat on the Facility Design & Construction Committee, which focused on those components of the code. Our committee met regularly, sharing research on state codes and published standards, striving to find areas of consensus, creating our own language with scientific data when we could and noting areas where existing data was lacking.