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Journal Article

Citation

Hammett M, Pearse L, Naito N, Watts D, Hooper T. Mil. Med. 2007; 172(8): 875-878.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, Association of Military Surgeons of the United States)

DOI

10.7205/MILMED.172.8.875

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVE
We examined common factors in vehicular drowning deaths that might lead to changes in equipment or training.

METHODS
Drowning deaths among service members deployed to Operations Iraqi Freedom or Enduring Freedom, 2003 to 2005, were ascertained using the Armed Forces Medical Examiner Tracking System database. Cases were linked to Army and Navy safety and investigative files.

RESULTS
Fifty-two cases of vehicular drowning deaths were identified. These occurred mostly at night, were almost always the result of a rollover, and were most frequently associated with a high-mobility medium-weight vehicle. Seat belts were rarely worn, but the majority of injuries should not have been severe enough to affect egress from the vehicle. These drowning deaths seldom occurred while engaged with the enemy and were rarely associated with bad road conditions or bad weather.

CONCLUSIONS
Effective preventive strategies might focus on training and equipment to reduce rollover events and on the expeditious extrication of victims.


Language: en

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