The New Zealand Herald

‘It just wasn’t my time’

Student grateful after being brought back from the dead in pool incident

- Lane Nichols

Ayoung man spent seven minutes and 29 seconds submerged underwater at an Auckland Council pool before being dragged out unconsciou­s and brought back from the dead. Canterbury University student Hamish Jamieson had been starved of oxygen and his heart had stopped until he received CPR and five electrical shocks from a defibrilla­tor.

Jamieson has recovered, and while he is grateful to be alive he is struggling to comprehend how he survived.

“It just wasn’t my time,” Jamieson, 25, told the Herald . “To know I was under water for that long and in that state, I am amazed and incredibly thankful to still be here.”

It’s thought Jamieson floated limp and unconsciou­s for up to six minutes after passing out while holding his breath in an episode known as shallow water blackout.

An expert says Jamieson is fortunate to be alive and it’s remarkable that he didn’t suffer a severe brain injury from lack of oxygen.

CCTV footage would later reveal two lifeguards chatting to each other nearby as Jamieson drifted lifelessly at the bottom of the pool.

And though an investigat­ion into the incident revealed a series of failures by staff and management, Jamieson and his family were never alerted to the findings or even told how long he was submerged.

The incident happened at Glenfield Pool and Leisure Centre in June last year and has never been reported.

Jamieson had been practising Wim Hof breathing — a meditative breathing technique to increase energy and improve cardiovasc­ular fitness — when he submerged and lost consciousn­ess.

He was unaware that the breathhold­ing technique should not be practised underwater.

The Herald has fought for months through the Official Informatio­n Act for the release of a “confidenti­al” Incident Investigat­ion Report which Auckland Council commission­ed after the near fatality.

The report, obtained last month after interventi­on from the Ombudsman, praises the emergency response but reveals systemic safety issues that contribute­d to the incident.

It says a concerned pool-goer alerted lifeguards to the emergency when Jamieson had already been underwater for five minutes.

One of the lifeguards glanced in Jamieson’s direction, but it took another 2.5 minutes before they realised he was drowning and a rescue commenced.

Jamieson was dragged from the pool and resuscitat­ed by lifeguards and ambulance crew.

The final-year chemical and process engineerin­g student spent the next six weeks in hospital, including 19 days in an induced coma on an ECMO life support machine in ICU.

He developed pneumonia, blood clots and a lung bleed. His parents held vigil while he fought for his life.

“No one really expected me to survive under the circumstan­ces. My heart actually stopped. It’s pretty scary.

“I remember sitting at the bottom of the pool and then a flash, opening my eyes underwater before blacking out with my lungs full of water.”

He came to in hospital weeks later in a confused series of “very dark and twisted hallucinat­ions” due to being heavily medicated.

Tubes had been inserted into his body and he was hooked up to a life support machine.

He lost 20kg, required blood transfusio­ns and had to learn how to walk again due to severe muscle atrophy.

And despite suffering short-term physical effects and missing a year at university, incredibly Jamieson has now made a full recovery, resuming his studies six weeks ago.

Speaking from his Christchur­ch flat, he stressed that he held no animosity towards the lifeguards who hadn’t notice him unconsciou­s in the pool.

He had met them in person to thank them for saving his life. “I’m so grateful for their efforts. “I couldn’t ask for a better outcome. I’m still here and I have no long-term injuries.”

He also extended his gratitude to the concerned public, emergency responders, medical staff at Auckland and North Shore hospitals, “and everyone who was involved in my rehabilita­tion including friends and family. To say I’m incredibly grateful is an understate­ment.”

He believes his health and fitness at the time of the incident contribute­d to him being alive.

As to failures identified in the report, Jamieson said he didn’t want to blame anyone as the problems were “systemic”.

“I’m not out to discredit anyone because of this report surfacing.

“They did everything they could. There might have been problems and unfortunat­ely sometimes incidents are what drives change.

“It looks like they’ve implemente­d corrective actions and that’s how the world moves forward. I just hope those changes prevent this happening to someone else.”

He said he was never interviewe­d for the report and had no idea why the council did not inform him of the findings, which he learned about from the Herald.

Jamieson said his ordeal had not deterred him from swimming. He had even returned to the pool where he nearly died.

“They looked at me funny and said, ‘Are you the guy’? I said, ‘Don’t worry, I’m not going to do it again’.”

He wanted his experience to serve as a warning to others about the dangers of holding your breath underwater.

The November 30 report is marked “confidenti­al and the property of Auckland Council”.

The incident occurred just before 9pm on June 23 last year. The pool was nearly empty which may have made the lifeguards complacent.

CCTV footage showed Jamieson practised underwater breath-holding in the main pool three times in close succession.

After submerging for the third time, he remained in a stable position underwater before he “became limp” after 2mins, 16secs, when his “outstretch­ed body commenced to drift”.

The two lifeguards had spent nearly 11 minutes talking to each other at a lifeguard station when they realised Jamieson was in trouble and rescued him.

“This behaviour distracted the lifeguards from carrying out effective scanning and supervisio­n of the pool,” the report says.

“Their lowered self-discipline to focus on the task at hand and recognise the distractio­n are factors that likely contribute­d to [Jamieson] not being seen underwater.”

While the report described the emergency response as “admirable and worthy of high praise”, it also listed 12 underlying causes that contribute­d to the incident.

They included: Lifeguard distractio­n and failure to recognise the unfolding emergency.

Budget constraint­s delayed managers purchasing a taller lifeguard chair that could enable proper visual scanning of the pool.

A lifeguard shortage put pressure on staff to fill extra shifts.

Inadequate lifeguard supervisio­n, with lifeguards overseen by the centre manager who had no aquatic expertise.

In-house safety protocols not followed by staff and management.

An absence of “robust risk management” to ensure the minimisati­on or eliminatio­n of health and safety risks.

The report found management had not provided effective oversight of safety management at the pool.

“There were a number of precursors that led to this incident, but the signs had not been spotted.

“Collective­ly, there were missed opportunit­ies to improve safety outcomes that may have prevented this incident.”

The report made 23 recommenda­tions to improve safety, including “informing and instructin­g lifeguards of ‘shallow water blackout’ and the dangers of breath holding”.

Auckland Council’s head of active recreation Dave Stewart said Jamieson had been holding his breath underwater and appeared to have blacked out due to a lack of oxygen.

The incident highlights a practice that lifeguards and public pool providers were increasing­ly concerned about.

“Shallow water blackout, which can happen when a swimmer faints in the water after repeatedly holding their breath for a long time, is dangerous for the swimmer and difficult for lifeguards to monitor.

“The actions of the lifeguard team resulted in a full recovery for the individual, however it was a harrowing experience for everyone involved.”

Stewart said the council carried out a full investigat­ion, interviewi­ng staff and customers, reviewing CCTV footage and speaking informally to the victim.

The investigat­ion was not about “apportioni­ng blame” but aimed to identify “operationa­l improvemen­ts” to mitigate further risk.

“As a result, we’ve made some adjustment­s to the way we do things at our sites and are also talking with our teams about the increasing popularity of breath-holding techniques in the pool.”

The 24-year-old Jamieson was likely to have been saved by his age and the quality of resuscitat­ion by profession­al lifeguards, an expert says.

“It’s pretty remarkable,” said Auckland University School of Medicine Professor of Anaesthesi­ology Simon Mitchell. “That’s pretty rare.”

Mitchell said the main danger from spending that long underwater and unconsciou­s was hypoxia (lack of oxygen in the blood) causing a brain injury. The longer the person went without oxygen, the more likely and severe a brain injury would be.

“It’s an almost invariable consequenc­e of a significan­t period of time without oxygen.

“Time is critical — it’s probably the most critical thing.”

Another potential consequenc­e was heart failure leading to cardiac arrest, and drowning.

“Seven and a half minutes puts him in a bracket that’s fairly high risk of a bad outcome. But his good outcome is not a world first.”

Mitchell was aware of cases overseas in which people had survived up to 30 minutes submerged without oxygen, but they tended to be young children “rescued from very cold water”.

Seven and a half minutes puts him in a bracket that’s fairly high risk of a bad outcome. Auckland University School of Medicine Professor of Anaesthesi­ology Simon Mitchell

 ??  ??
 ?? Photo / George Heard ?? Hamish Jamieson spent seven minutes unconsciou­s before lifeguards saved him.
Photo / George Heard Hamish Jamieson spent seven minutes unconsciou­s before lifeguards saved him.
 ??  ?? A security camera photograph of Glenfield pool.
A security camera photograph of Glenfield pool.

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