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Staying With Capsized Boat Aided
Survival By RAY REYES
Nick Schuyler's nightmare began Saturday afternoon when
the boat he was on capsized in the Gulf. For two days, he
endured 14-foot seas, 30 mph wind gusts, water
temperatures in the 60s and air temperatures that dropped
into the lows 40s.
How did he survive?
Many factors, including body fat and clothing, determine
someone's chance of survival in cold water, medical
doctors and rescuers say. One factor, though, is the most
vital.
"If you stay with the boat you have a better chance,"
said Scotty Hendricks, operations specialist for the U.S.
Coast Guard in Jacksonville. "If you don't, chances go
down by the hour."
Photographs of Monday's rescue show Schuyler sitting atop
the capsized 21-foot boat. He upped the odds of living by
getting mostly out of the water, Tampa Fire Rescue Capt.
Mark Bogush said.
"Once you take that 98.6-degree body and put it in
60-degree water, it starts sucking the warmth out of
you," Bogush said. Coast Guard
officials say the water was 68 degrees when Schuyler was
rescued.
At that temperature, a typical person submerged in water
can expect to float two to seven hours before exhaustion
or unconsciousness sets in, said Randy Boone, a former
senior chief aviations survivalman with the Coast Guard.
Anything that insulates you from the cold - clothing,
debris from the boat, body warmth from other boaters -
also helps, Bogush said.
Shivers start when body temperatures dip about 3 degrees
below normal, said Vernard Adams, chief medical examiner
for the Hillsborough County Medical Examiner's Office.
Reflexes no longer work under 81 degrees and respiration
becomes labored. The heart can stop if body temperature
falls below 80.
A person's percentage of body fat also plays a role.
Having less body fat actually works against you in cold
water, Bogush said.
Bogush said he is curious to hear Schuyler's account of
survival.
"Hopefully, we can hear three more stories," he said.
Original at: http://www2.tbo.com:80/content/2009/mar/03/na-staying-with-capsized-boat-aided-survival/
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