Slashdot Mirror


Automated Pool System Saves Swimmer

An anonymous reader writes "An automated swimmer tracking system installed in a pool in Wales has saved a young girl who just collapsed and sank to the bottom, by paging lifeguards when it could not detect her moving." This is the first time a UK swimmer has been saved by the £65,000 Poseidon system since it was installed in March of 2003.

1 of 426 comments (clear)

  1. Re:One step further by grammar+fascist · · Score: 5, Informative

    No scream, no splashing or struggling, just girl jumps in and doesn't come up out of the water.

    Funny enough, that's usually what happens, since most people in distress either can't swim or have a medical problem that prevents them from doing so.

    The non-swimmers are the most interesting. In lifeguard training, we watched a video of swimmers in distress taken at a water park. It turns out that something like 1/3 of the people who go there can't swim, and they still use the big slides that dump you into six feet of water! Lifeguards were making more than ten saves every day...so it was a perfect place to get video.

    You'd be surprised how quiet they are. They're not bothered to scream or shout - they're mostly trying to breathe. They move very little, splash very little, kick straight down, do dumb, ineffective things with their arms.... The quiet, animalistic panic just before drowning is a little eerie to watch.

    If someone is treading water and shouting "HELP!" he's probably fine, in other words. For the moment, anyway.

    Any lifeguard worth his salt would be watching young people in the deep end, especially those underwater. The lifeguard on duty may have been doing that, in fact, and would have just waited longer than the Poseidon system did. The article doesn't say whether the lifeguard was tracking the girl already.

    --
    I got my Linux laptop at System76.