People are drowning in lifeguarded pools. Swimmers have always depended on the lifeguard's basic human capabilities alone to spot someone in difficulty. Surface glare, specular reflection, moving water, high bather loads and physical blindspots are just some of the problems making the lifeguards' vital job increasingly difficult and putting lives in danger.

The latest guidelines from the UK's Health and Safety Executive state that the 'water area above and below the surface must be covered by a lifeguard' - a simple scan of the surface is no longer sufficient.

The only way to meet the requirement for '3-Dimensional Lifeguarding' is to install specialist technology.
 


 
  The Swimguard approach to swimming pool safety is to enhance the human capability of the lifeguard by providing them with underwater 'eyes' in the form of video cameras.
 
  The proven Swimguard technology provides the lifeguard with the means to identify a swimmer who is in difficulty, and possibly entering the first stage of drowning, in all parts of the pool - deep or shallow, lap pool or moving water.
 
  Every second counts in such situations and Swimguard increases the potential for a rescue before the casualty is stationary on the pool floor, the point at which other 'Drowning Detection Systems' alert the lifeguards, by which time it is probably too late to prevent a drowning or serious neurological injury.
 
  We contend along with most safety consultants, that the best way to supervise swimmers and prevent drownings is with the lifeguard making the important decisions and not a computer.  

 

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