top of page
RLSNSW-Ripple-Background.jpg

7 Sept 2021

National Drowning Report reveals a significant spike in Deaths

Swimming & Lifesaving
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

New research by Australia’s leading water safety authorities Royal Life Saving Society – Australia (RLSSA) and Surf Life Saving Australia (SLSA) has revealed a spike in drowning deaths in the past 12 months, with unfamiliar locations, exhaustion, and interruptions to regular swimming during the COVID-19 pandemic considered key factors.


In the Royal Life Saving National Drowning Report 2021 and Surf Life Saving National Coastal Safety Report 2021 released today, there were 294 drowning deaths in the past 12 months across Australia’s coastline, inland waterways and pools, which is 20% higher than last year (245).


Royal Life Saving Society – Australia CEO, Justin Scarr, said he was saddened by the tragic increase in child drowning, and the generational impacts of disruptions to children’s swimming and water safety lessons.


“Royal Life Saving fears that many children will never return to lessons, so won’t meet the fundamental water safety benchmarks, and will miss out on the lifelong benefits of being able to swim. Young children need constant supervision around water, and pool owners should check their pool fence and gate is in good working order ahead of summer,” Mr Scarr said.


“We are concerned about the sharp increase in drowning deaths in inland waterways, particularly rivers. Alcohol and drugs are a key factor in drowning, and lead men to overestimate their swimming ability and under-estimate the risks,” he said.


View the Video


NATIONAL FINDINGS – Royal Life Saving National Drowning Report 2021

  • 294 drowning deaths in Australia in 2020/21; this is a 20% increase on last year (245 deaths) and an 8% increase on the 10-year average (273 deaths)

  • 80% of drowning deaths were males

  • 25 drowning deaths among children aged 0-4 years; this is a 108% increase on last year and a 9% increase on the 10-year average

  • People aged 25-34 years accounted for 17% of all drowning deaths, the most of any age group

  • Rivers and creeks were the leading location for drowning (26%), followed by beaches (22%) and ocean/harbourlocations (15%)

  • 75 drowning deaths in rivers and creeks;this is a 53% increase on last year and a 3% increase on the 10-yearaverage

  • Swimming and recreating was the leading activity prior to drowning (25%), followed by boating (15%) and falls into water (14%)

Key NSW Summary






Download the Full Report

RLS_NationalDrowningReport2021_LR (002)
.pdf
Download PDF • 5.86MB

View all of the National Drowning Report Information


Related Posts

해당 언어로 게시된 게시물이 없습니다.
게시물이 게시되면 여기에 표시됩니다.
RLSNSW-Ripple-Background.jpg
Combined reverse png.PNG

ABN:  73 000 580 825

34/10 Gladstone Road, Castle Hill NSW 2154

PO Box 8307, Baulkham Hills BC NSW 2153

Telephone: 02 9634 3700

Email: nsw@royalnsw.com.au

RTO 90666 - Royal Life Saving Society of Australia (New South Wales Branch)

NSW Government Logo - Transparent.png
ACTGov_stacked_rev.png
Tasmanian Government-03.png
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Royal Life Saving would like to acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the Traditional Custodians of our land - Australia. In particular the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation who are the Traditional Custodians of this place we now call Sydney and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and future.

bottom of page