Section 8: Safety Considerations
8.1 Water Surface Agitation
Mechanical agitation (bubbles or spray) is mandatory during all competition and practice sessions. The system must produce visible surface disturbance directly below all boards and platforms in use. This helps divers orient during high-speed rotations and prevents disorientation injuries.
8.2 Pool Depth and Clearance
Minimum pool depths are strictly enforced: 5.0 m under the 10 m platform, 3.5 m under the 3 m springboard. Adjacent platforms must have minimum horizontal separation of 2.50 m to prevent collision. The distance from the end of the board to the pool wall must be at least 1.80 m (springboard) or 1.50 m (platform).
8.3 Medical and Emergency Protocols
- A qualified medical team must be present at poolside for all sanctioned competitions and training sessions.
- Spinal injury immobilization equipment (backboard, cervical collar) must be immediately accessible.
- Underwater rescue divers are stationed at major competitions in case of unconscious entry.
8.4 Training Progression
New dives are first learned using dry-land equipment (trampoline, foam pit, overhead harness rig), then progressed to 1 m springboard, then 3 m, and finally 10 m platform. Water bubbler machines can be activated at maximum output during training to soften the water surface for higher-impact entries while athletes are learning.
8.5 Lighting and Environmental Conditions
- Lighting: Indoor venues must provide uniform illumination of at least 1,500 lux at the water surface, with no glare on the water that could impair a diver's ability to see the surface during flight.
- Water temperature: Pool water must be maintained at 26–28 °C (79–82 °F). Excessively cold water increases the risk of muscle cramping and injury on entry.
- Air temperature: Venue air temperature should be maintained at 24–28 °C (75–82 °F) to prevent divers from becoming chilled while waiting between dives.
- Outdoor venues: Wind speed and sun glare must be monitored. Competition may be delayed if conditions impair the safety or fairness of judging.
8.6 Common Injuries and Prevention
- Wrist and hand injuries: Repeated high-speed entries can cause stress fractures and sprains. Proper hand-clasp technique (flat-hand entry) distributes impact forces.
- Shoulder injuries: Overhead entry forces stress the rotator cuff. Conditioning programs focus on shoulder stability and range of motion.
- Back injuries: Impact forces from "short" (over-rotated) or "flat" (under-rotated) entries compress the spine. Progressive training and core strengthening reduce risk.
- Eye injuries: Entry splash can cause corneal abrasion. Some divers wear goggles during training but not competition.
8.7 Anti-Doping
World Aquatics enforces WADA anti-doping regulations. In-competition and out-of-competition testing is conducted at all major championships. Athletes in the Registered Testing Pool must provide quarterly whereabouts information. Violations result in suspension and potential disqualification of results.