IMO IB946E-2012 A POCKET GUIDE FOR COLD WATER SURVIVAL (Fourth Edition).pdf
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1、Cold Water Survival2012EditionA POCKET GUIDE FORCold Water SurvivalFirst published in 1981 by the International Maritime Organization 4 Albert Embankment, London SE1 7SRFourth edition, 2012Printed in the United Kingdom by MicropressISBN 978-92-801-1565-9 Copyright International Maritime Organization
2、 2012All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without prior permission in writing from the International Maritime Organization.Reproduction and/or translation rights may be available for this title.
3、For further details please contact IMO Publishing at copyrightimo.org.This publication has been prepared from official documents of IMO, and every effort has been made to eliminate errors and reproduce the original text(s) faithfully. Readers should be aware that, in case of inconsistency, the offic
4、ial IMO text will prevail.IMO PUBLICATIONSales number: IB946EContents1 Introduction 12 Cold water hazards and their effects: 2 knowledge that can improve survival chances3 Actions prior to abandoning the ship 54 The survival phase: in a survival craft 65 The survival phase: in the water 76 The rescu
5、e phase: guidance for those 9 engaged in search and rescue 7 Treatment of people recovered from cold water 118 Treatment of people recovered from survival craft 149 The apparently dead 1510 Summing up 161Cold Water Survival1 IntroductionThis guidance is intended primarily for seafarers. It provides
6、information which will help you if you are unlucky enough to fall into cold water, or have to enter it in an emergency, or have to use survival craft in cold conditions. It also provides information which will help seafarers, trained as first-aid providers, to treat those rescued from cold condition
7、s.This guide briefly examines the hazards of exposure to the cold that may endanger life, and provides advice based on the latest medical and scientific opinion on how to prevent or minimize those dangers. It is a sad fact that people continue to die at sea through a lack of this knowledge. Knowing
8、what is likely to happen if you are exposed to cold water is a survival aid in itself. A thorough understanding of the information contained in this booklet may some day save your life or someone elses.It is most important to realize that you are not helpless to affect your own survival in cold wate
9、r. Understanding your bodys response and simple self-help techniques can extend your survival time, particularly if you are wearing a lifejacket. You can make a difference; this guide is intended to show you how.The guidance is laid out as follows: an explanation of cold water hazards and their effe
10、cts followed by sections on: actions to be taken prior to abandoning your ship that will improve your chances of survival actions to be taken during the survival phase, whether in survival craft or in the water the rescue phase treatment of people recovered from cold water or from survival craft in
11、cold conditions treatment of the apparently dead.2 3Cold Water SurvivalCold Water Survival2 Cold water hazards and their effects: knowledge that can improve survival chancesAn understanding of how your body reacts to cold air or water exposure, and knowing the steps you can take to help your body de
12、lay the damaging effects of cold stress, will help you stay alive.If you need to abandon your ship you should, if possible, avoid going into cold water at all. Cold water represents a much greater risk than cold air, partly because water takes heat away from the body much faster than air. Human bein
13、gs cool four to five times faster in water than in air of the same temperature and the colder the water is the more likely it is that you will suffer the physical reactions and medical problems described below. Therefore, you should try to enter survival or rescue craft directly, without entering th
14、e water.The major threats of cold water immersion are: drowning hypothermia* (see appendix 2, page 20, Symptoms of hypothermia) collapse just before, during, or after rescue.Four stages of immersion have been identified. Each is associated with particular risks, and it helps to understand these and
15、so be better able to deal with them.Initial responses to immersion in cold water may include: inability to hold your breath an involuntary gasp, followed by uncontrollable breathing increased stress placed on your heart.These responses are caused by the sudden fall in skin temperature. It is importa
16、nt to remember that they will last only about three minutes and will then ease. Remember too that, at this stage: the fitter you are, the smaller the initial responses to cold water immersion and the smaller the chance of you experiencing heart problems wearing an appropriate lifejacket, properly fi
17、tted, will decrease the risk by helping to keep your airway clear of the water and reducing the need for you to exercise during this critical period wearing appropriate protective clothing will also decrease the risk by slowing the rate of skin cooling and, thereby, the size of the initial responses
18、 if you experience initial responses you should stay still for the first few minutes of immersion, doing as little as possible until you have regained control of your breathing; a lifejacket or other source of buoyancy will help you do this the period of possible self-rescue starts immediately after
19、 the initial responses, if experienced, and before hypothermia sets in.Short-term immersion effects follow the initial responses. During this phase, cooling of the muscles and nerves close to the surface of the skin particularly in the limbs can lead to inability to perform physical tasks. Swimming
20、ability will be significantly impaired. (Swimming accelerates the rate of cooling in any event.) It follows that: essential survival action that requires grip strength and/or manual dexterity such as adjusting clothing or your * By medical convention clinical hypothermia is considered present when t
21、he “deep”, or “core”, body temperature falls below 35C (95F): that is, when about 2C (3.5F) has been lost. With continued cooling consciousness will be progressively impaired and then lost; eventually death will follow. However, in cold water death from hypothermia itself is relatively rare. More of
22、 a threat is the loss of heat from the muscles: incapacitation may then lead to the casualty being unable to keep their airway the mouth and/or nose clear of the water, so that they drown. Hence the importance of being well clothed and wearing a correctly fitted and adjusted lifejacket.4 5Cold Water
23、 SurvivalCold Water Survivallifejacket, or locating a lifejacket whistle or turning on a light, for example should be taken as soon as possible after the initial responses to cold water immersion have passed you should not attempt to swim unless it is to reach a fellow survivor or a nearby shore, cr
24、aft, or other floating object onto which you can hold or climb.Stay calm. Evaluate your options. Can you reach a shore or floating object knowing that your swimming ability will be less than normal? If not, stay where you are, conserve body heat (see below), and await rescue.Long-term immersion effe
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