The Truth About Cold Water
By Mario Vittone On April 12, 2013
Note: With the spring boating season upon us, the U.S. Coast Guard warned today
that although the air temperatures are warmer, the water is still cold and
presents a significant danger to those looking to cool off. This article was
first published to gCaptain.com in 2010, and we are reposting today (April 12,
2013) to help you stay safe while out on the water this season. A link to a
follow-up article, titled "The Truth About Cold Water Recovery", can be found
at the bottom of this page.
By Mario Vittone
I'm going to come right out and tell you something that almost no one in the
maritime industry understands. That includes mariners, executives, managers,
insurers, dock workers, for certain fisherman, and even many (most) rescue
professionals:
It is impossible to die from hypothermia in cold water unless you are wearing
flotation, because without flotation you won't live long enough to become
hypothermic.
Despite the research, the experience, and all the data, I still hear "experts"
touting as wisdom completely false information about cold water and what
happens to people who get in it. With another season of really cold water
approaching, I feel compelled to get these points across in a way that will
change the way mariners behave out there on (or near) the water.
What follows is the truth about cold water and cold water immersion. I know
that you think you know all there is to know about hypothermia already (and
maybe you do), but read ahead and see if you aren't surprised by something.
When the water is cold (say under 50 degrees F) there are significant
physiological reactions that occur, in order, almost always.
You Can't Breath:
The first is phase of cold water immersion is called the cold shock response:
It is a stage of increased heart rate and blood pressure, uncontrolled gasping,
and sometimes uncontrolled movement. Lasting anywhere from 30 seconds to a
couple of minutes depending on a number of factors, the cold shock response can
be deadly all by itself. In fact, of all the people who die in cold water, it
is estimated that 20% die in the first two minutes. They drown, they panic,
they take on water in that first uncontrolled gasp, if they have heart problems
the cold shock may trigger a heart attack. Surviving this stage is about
getting your breathing under control, realizing that the stage will pass, and
staying calm.
You Can't Swim:
One of the primary reasons given by recreational boaters when asked why they
don't wear a life jacket, is that they can swim. Listen up, Tarzan; I swam for
a living for the better part of my adult life, and when the water is cold
none of us can swim for very long. The second stage of cold water immersion is
called cold incapacitation. lacking adequate insulation your body will make its
own. Long before your core temperature drops a degree, the veins in your
extremities (those things you swim with) will constrict, you will lose your
ability control your hands, and the muscles in your arms and legs will just
flat out quit working well enough to keep you above water. Without some form of
flotation, and in not more than 30 minutes, the best swimmer among us will
drown definitely no way around it. Without ever experiencing a drop in core
temperature (at all) over 50% of the people who die in cold water, die from
drowning perpetuated by cold incapacitation.
You Last Longer than You Think:
If you have ever heard the phrase, "That water is so cold, you will die from
hypothermia within ten minutes." then you have been lied to about hypothermia.
For that matter you can replace ten minutes with twenty, or thirty, or even an
hour, and you've still been lied to. In most cases, in water of say 40 degrees
(all variables to one side), it typically takes a full hour to approach
unconsciousness from hypothermia, the third stage of cold water immersion. But
remember, you must be wearing flotation to get this far.
We are all different in this regard, but I once spent an hour in 44 degree
water wearing street clothes and my core temperature was only down by less than
two degrees (I was not clinically hypothermic). It was uncomfortable to be
sure, and I wouldn't recommend finding your own limit, but it probably would
have taken another hour to lose consciousness, and an hour after that to cool
my core to the point of no return. The bodies efforts to keep the core warm
vasoconstriction and shivering are surprisingly effective. The shivering and
blood shunting to the core are so effective, that twenty minutes after jumping
in (twice the "you'll be dead in ten minutes" time), I had a fever of 100.2.
Rescue Professionals Think You Live Longer:
There is a good side to the misconceptions about hypothermia. Should you ever
be in the water in need of rescue, you can be certain that the Coast Guard is
going to give you the benefit of every possible doubt. When developing search
criteria search and rescue coordinators use something called the Cold
Exposure Survival Model (CESM): It is a program wherein they enter all the
available data about the victim (age, weight, estimated body fat, clothing,
etc.) and about the environment (water temp, sea state, air temp, wind) and the
software spits them out a number that represents the longest possible time you
can survive under those conditions. I plugged my own information into it once
and it said I could survive for over 4 hours in 38 degree water wearing nothing
but a t-shirt and jeans and no flotation. I can tell you from experience that
the CESM is full of it I'd give me 35 minutes tops but the error is
comforting. If the program that determines how long I might live is going to be
wrong I want it to be wrong in that direction.
Out of the Water is Not Out of Trouble:
I lost count of the number of survivors I annoyed in the back of the helicopter
because I wouldn't let them move. I had a rule if they came from a cold water
environment they laid down and stayed down until the doctors in the E.R. said
they could stand. It didn't matter to me how good they felt or how warm they
thought they were. Because the final killer of cold water immersion is
post-rescue collapse. Hypothermia does things besides making everything colder.
Victims are physiologically different for awhile. One of the things that
changes is called heart-rate variability. The hearts ability to speed up and
slow down has been effected. Getting up and moving around requires your heart
to pump more blood, being upright and out of the water is also taxing, then any
number of other factors collide and the heart starts to flutter instead of pump
and down you go. Victims of immersion hypothermia are two things; lucky to be
alive, and fragile. Until everything is warmed back up out of the water and
dry is good enough mobility comes later.
Did You Learn Anything?:
If you did, then hopefully you'll use it to make good decisions when it comes
to being safe on and around cold water; good decisions like these:
1. When working on deck, wear flotation. This includes, especially, all
fisherman in Alaska. I couldn't find more recent research, but the 31 Alaskan
"fell overboard" casualties in 2005 died from drowning, not cold water. Not one
of them was wearing flotation. Many couldn't stay above water long enough for
their own boats to make a turn and pick them up
..over a life jacket.
2. If you witness a man overboard getting the life ring directly to them
is critical (vital step one must do it). Make certain that all-important
piece of safety gear is not just on your vessel, but readily available and not
tied to the cradle.
3. When working on deck wear flotation. I said that already? Well, when
I quit reading search reports that end with "experienced" mariners dying
because they thought they understood cold water I'll come up with better
advice.
For more advice about how to handle an accidental immersion into cold water
please watch Cold Water Boot Camp it is one of the best 10 minutes on
immersion hypothermia ever produced. For even more advice, ask me a question on
the discussion boards.
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