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The Scuba Diving In Marine Exhibits Risk Assessment includes the following job steps and related potential hazards:
- 1. Preparation
- Equipment failure
- Drowning
- 2. Pre-dive safety check
- Decompression sickness
- Gas leaks
- 3. Entry and descent
- Entanglement in equipment
- Marine life injury
- 4. Underwater navigation
- Low visibility
- Currents or surge
- 5. Underwater communication
- Miscommunication of signals
- Equipment malfunctions
- 6. Maintenance of neutral buoyancy
- Air embolism
- Decompression sickness
- 7. Management of air supply
- Suffocation
- Hypercapnia
- 8. Use of underwater tools and equipment
- Equipment mishandling
- Equipment failure
- 9. Monitoring marine displays
- Eye strain
- Vertigo caused by depth perception issues
- 10. Interaction with marine life
- Bites or stings
- Allergic reactions
- 11. Ascent and safety stop
- Decompression sickness
- Air embolism
- 12. Exit from water and de-gearing
- Slips and falls
- Muscle strains
- 13. Post-dive maintenance of gear
- Gas poisoning
- Barotrauma
- 14. Debriefing and report writing
- Repetitive strain injuries
- Eye strain
- 15. Waste management and ecological impact consideration
- Pollution
- Damage to marine environment
- 16. Emergency procedures familiarisation
- Inefficiency during emergencies
- Panic attacks
- 17. Regular audits and training refreshers
- Skill deterioration
- Complacency
- 18. Quality rest and nutrition management
- Fatigue
- Malnourishment
- 19. Mental health support and stress management
- Burnout
- Mental health deterioration
- 20. Fitness monitoring and health screenings
- Heart issues
- Physical fitness decline