Beach safety tips
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Hoag Hospital’s Project Wipeout aims to prevent neck and spinal cord
injuries while at the beach. Here are some tips:
* Learn to swim. If you can’t swim and overhead stroke for at least 15
minutes, you should not be in the ocean.
* Never swim alone, and swim near a lifeguard whenever possible.
* Check with a lifeguard to find out where shallow and deep areas are
located. Do not assume that the ocean floor has an even bottom. The sandy
ocean floor is constantly changing with the currents, creating both deep
holes and shallow sandbars within minutes.
* Don’t run from the beach into the water and dive headfirst into the
waves. Sandbars that can’t be seen from the surface may be present or the
water may be too shallow, or both.
* Don’t jump or dive into the water from a pier or rock jetty. From
the viewpoint of a pier or jetty, water appears much deeper than it
really is. What looks like 10 to 20 feet of water may only be 2 to 3 feet
deep. Diving in could be fatal.
* If you’re bodysurfing or Boogie boarding, always keep your arms out
in front of you to protect your head and neck. Always wear fins and a
board leash.
* Stay out of the “surf zone,” where the waves break. Waves are at
their most forceful here, and even a small wave can lift you up and throw
you into the sand. Avoid this by not trying to catch a wave too late or
by ducking under the wave.
* If you are pulled out to sea by a rip current, don’t panic. A rip
current will pull you away from the shore, but it will not pull you
under. Just swim parallel to the shore until you are out of the rip, then
swim in on to shore.
* If you are in trouble, call or wave for help.
* Never drink or use drugs at the beach. It clouds your ability to
make wise decisions, and that could be fatal.
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