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PAGE ONE :: WORLD NEWS :: INDUSTRY

Japanese tourist dies in Hawaii diving on helmet dive

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Sea Walker diving helmet
Helmet dives are very popular with young Japanese females who cannot scuba dive. Pictured here is the 'Sea Walker' dive helmet, which to date has no accidents according to the Sea Walker company.

HONOLULU, Hawaii (19 Aug 2002) - A Japanese tourist died yesterday, two days after a diving accident off He'eia Small Boat Harbor left her in a coma.

The Coast Guard has launched an investigation.

The 43-year-old woman was aboard a boat operated by Kane'ohe Bay Ocean Sports on Wednesday and had been diving using a large helmet that allows its wearer to walk on the ocean floor while an air pump on the vessel above provides a constant supply of air.

Participants in helmet dives are not required to become certified scuba divers.

When the boat returned to the harbor to meet emergency workers and firefighters, the woman was unconscious and not breathing, officials said. Noises from her lungs may have indicated the presence of fluids, paramedics said.

Emergency Medical Services workers performed CPR and helped her breathe through a tube. She was taken to Castle Medical Center, where she died yesterday at 5:11 p.m., a spokesman said.

 

The Coast Guard is required to investigate serious marine incidents, said Coast Guard Lt. Brenda Roderig, assistant senior investigating officer with the investigations and analysis department of the Marine Safety Office in Honolulu.

Boat owners or operators are required to report incidents in which an accident victim is hospitalized for more than 24 hours or incapacitated for 72 hours, according to Coast Guard regulations.

The investigation was launched Thursday, Roderig said. She would give no further information about the accident or the investigation.

Officials from Kane'ohe Bay Ocean Sports could not be reached for comment yesterday.

SOURCE - Reuters

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