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In Cambodia, a new effort to end drowning deaths
Program teaches water safety to villages in Cambodia, where an estimated average of 6 children die from drowning daily
Anadolu Agency | 3 Dec. 2016
PREY VENG PROVINCE, Cambodia
The Japanese-built school in Kampong Trabek district’s Peam Montear commune is surrounded by water.
In
front of the school, a rusted metal gate hugs the banks of the Kampong
Trabaek river. To the rear of the building, fields of waterlogged paddy
fill the distance.
Here in this
tranquil riparian community, like so many others around the country,
people must go to the water for daily tasks such as farming, fishing,
cooking and cleaning pots, as well as giving their cattle a cool-down
scrub.
However, there is danger in the
familiar. Probe further, and the anecdotes make it clear that this close
relationship with the water has had its consequences.
A one-year-old baby died from drowning last year. One child died washing one of the family cows in the river.
A
13-year-old boy -- villagers say he was visiting from another area --
died from drowning as he attempted to swim across the river last month. A
two-year-old died after climbing into a large water collection jar.
In a village nearby, one youngster got into difficulty in the river. A second made a rescue attempt. Both died.
Drowning as a term is considered a process that has three potential outcomes: Death, survival, or survival with a brain injury.
The data backs up the gravity of the first outcome.
A
2007 report released by The Alliance for Safe Children (TASC) found
that 2,094 children died from drowning that year in Cambodia and it is
estimated that an average of six children continue to die from drowning
across Cambodia every day.
A 2012
UNICEF report said drowning is a “leading cause of death in childhood
after infancy” in Cambodia, as well as four other countries in the
region.
It also found that “in Cambodia
the great majority of drowning was not seen or reported to a
health-care facility, whether immediately fatal or subsequently fatal.”
In
2014, the World Health Organization said Cambodian children are twice
as likely to drown before the age of 15 than those from other countries
in the region. Males are also twice as likely to die from drowning as
females.
In Peam Montear commune, as in
many others around the country, the instinct is to enter the water to
try and save a person from drowning. The second, if back on land, is to
turn the victim upside down and shake them.
Neither of these methods is advised.
Conrad
Foote felt compelled to address Cambodia’s drowning problem after
meeting with a family whose 11-year-old son had died from drowning
several years ago.
“He was showing off with his friends, and he died in a canal,” Foote said this week.
Foote,
a keen swimmer, completed a Masters in Public Health, with a
dissertation focusing on the issue of drowning in Cambodia. In 2012, he
founded Safety When It Matters (SWIM) Cambodia with the aim of bringing
CPR training, education and swimming lessons to as many communities as
possible.
“We want to show people how
simple it is,” he said. To do this, Foote is using an aquatic survival
program designed by the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, a British
marine safety charity.
Teachers at the
iCan British International School in Phnom Penh, which has partnered
with SWIM to implement the program, were given training in how to teach
water safety skills and CPR.
On Monday,
the community-based education began here in this unassuming village,
about eight kilometers upriver from the Vietnamese border.
It’s
one of two villages in this commune where volunteers from the Youth
Star service program are working -- passing on the water safety skills
are set to become part of their mandate.
About 70 children -- and in the afternoon, 10 adults -- gathered at the school on Monday to be taught these vital skills.
They
learned how to recognize different dangers, and that performing a
rescue attempt using a stick or rope from a riverbank is far safer and
more effective.
They learned how to
perform CPR, thanks to child- and adult-sized dummies on which they
could practice, and how to put someone in the recovery position.
They also tried on life jackets.
“There’s
a very high intention to save, that’s why so many adults and children
die from trying to save someone drowning,” Foote said, adding that
parents were also being encouraged to closely supervise their children.
His
team is set to return to the village in February to check up on how
well the residents have retained what they learned, and to see if they
have had to apply any of their new skills.
The ultimate aim, Foote says, is to add swimming lessons to the program.
This
can be done almost anywhere there is a body of water, as long as a
small, simple bamboo structure can be built; this gives those learning
to swim something to hold on to, and a place to put their feet and rest.
“In
a three-week period you can get children taught survival swimming,
which is the ability to swim 15 meters. That’s good enough to save most
children’s lives,” he said.
WHO and the
ministry of youth, education and sport run a separate water safety
program for communities in Kompong Chhnang province, but Foote’s hope is
that such training can span the length and breadth of the country.
Kim Sarin, the ministry’s deputy director of curriculum development, did not respond to questions before press time.
As the team made a seven-kilometer boat journey back toward their bus Monday, it was on a river that was very much alive.
Scores of people were gathering their nets, washing, cleaning utensils and bathing their cattle.
As
monumental as the task of disseminating safety in the water is, there
are clear signs of hope for a safer way to interact with the water.
Yelps
came from one of the riverbanks, where a man was swimming with a child.
The young boy, waving to the boat, was wearing a life jacket.
“That,” said Foote,” is great to see.”
Have fewer children, teach them better. But noooooooooo, Khmer parents are useless.
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