The Tanzania Times
East, Central and Southern African Times News Network

More people are drowning to death in Africa than elsewhere across the globe

More than 30 people are estimated to be drowning every hour in the world, at the rate of one death per two minutes.

This is according to the World Health Organization (WHO) first-ever report on drowning prevention.

More than 7.2 million people, mainly children, could therefore die by drowning by the year 2050 if current trends continue.

The WHO report also reveals that more than 300 000 people died by drowning in 2021 alone.

Most of the deaths by drowning have been occurring in African countries.

The African Region records the highest rate of deaths by drowning with 5.6 victims per 100, 000 people.

However, the same report indicates a 38 percent drop in the global drowning death rate since 2000.

The World Health Organization says this should be a major global health achievement.

The organization notes that drowning remains a major public health issue.

Almost half of all drowning deaths occur among people below the age of 29 years, and a quarter occur among children under the age of 5 years.

“Children without adult supervision are at an especially high risk of drowning,” says the report.

“The significant decline in drowning deaths since 2000 is great news and proof that the simple, practical interventions that WHO recommends work,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the World Health Organization’s Director-General.

“Still, every drowning death is one death too many, and millions of people remain at risk. This report contains crucial data for policy-making and recommendations for urgent action to save lives.”

Progress in reducing drowning has been uneven.

At the global level, 9 in 10 drowning deaths take place in low- and middle-income countries.

The European Region saw a 68 percent drop-in drowning death rate between 2000 and 2021, yet the rate fell by just 3 percent in the African Region, which has the highest rate of any region with 5.6 deaths per 100, 000 people.

This may be influenced by the levels of national commitments to address the issue: within the African Region, only 15 percent of countries had a national strategy or plan for drowning prevention, compared to 45 percent of countries in the European Region.

“Drowning continues to be a major public health issue, but progress is possible, particularly if governments work with strong partners at the local level,” said Michael Bloomberg, founder of Bloomberg L.P. and Bloomberg Philanthropies.

Michael is WHO Global Ambassador for Non-communicable Diseases and Injuries, and 108th mayor of New York City.

“For more than a decade, Bloomberg Philanthropies has supported governments and local organizations that are leading effective drowning prevention efforts. This new report shows what more countries can do to help save thousands of lives every year.”

Clear guidance to reduce deaths outlined but uptake varies

More than 7.2 million people, mainly children, could die by drowning by the year 2050 if current trends continue.

Yet most drowning deaths could be prevented by implementing WHO-recommended interventions.

WHO recommends a series of community-based actions for drowning prevention, which include the installation of barriers to prevent child access to water; provision of safe places away from water for pre-school children, teaching school-aged children basic swimming water safety and safe rescue skills.

There is the need to start training people in rescue and resuscitation; strengthening public awareness on drowning; setting and enforcing safe boating, shipping and ferry regulations; and improving flood risk management.

The report found WHO’s evidence-based drowning prevention interventions are being implemented to varying degrees.

Encouragingly, 73 percent of countries have search and rescue services, and a further 73 percent implement community-based flood risk mitigation programmes

However, only 33 percent of countries offer national programmes to train bystanders in safe rescue and resuscitation, and just 22 percent integrate swimming and water safety training into their school curricula

Accurate data is critical to inform prevention strategies, yet only 65 percent of countries report collecting drowning data through civil registration and vital statistics systems. Quality data is further required to compellingly raise awareness on the issue and mobilize governments and communities to take action.

The report identifies strengths and shortfalls in policy and legislation:

While 81 percent of countries have laws on passenger safety for travelling by boat:

Just 44 percent of these laws require regular safety inspections of the boats, and only 66 percent of countries mandate lifejacket use for recreational boating and transport on water.

Of concern, 86 percent of countries lack laws for fencing around swimming pools, which is key to preventing child drowning in certain settings.

This report, developed in response to a Member State request made through World Health Assembly Resolution 76.18 (2023), summarizes achievements and challenges towards drowning prevention at the global level and provides a benchmark for which progress can be tracked.

The comprehensive report highlights that drowning prevention requires a coordinated, whole-of-society response. Through increased collaboration and investment, those most vulnerable to drowning can be protected to ensure the promising trends currently observed are experienced uniformly and equitably.

Important to note is that an increasing number of people are being displaced from their homes due to conflict, violence, political or economic instability, as well as climate change and other disasters.

In many cases, people resort to irregular channels for migration that are extremely hazardous.

The Missing Migrants Project, led by the International Organization for Migration, estimates that more than 67 922 people have lost their lives during unsafe migration journeys since 2014. Of these deaths, 39 383 (57 percent) are attributed to drowning.

These deaths are not included in the WHO global status report given the methods of the Global Health Estimates.