Learn to Swim
Above ground pool sale, above ground swimming pools, spas, swimming pools, Uncategorized
Nearly 10 people drown in the U.S. each day — 70 percent of them are adults. Of the children who drown, 70 percent of them have an adult nearby. The common denominator here is the swimming proficiency and water safety knowledge of the adult. One hundred percent of the behavior change needed is on the part of the adult. We must message that adults are the “lifeguards” of their children and then we must equip them (the adults) with the skill and knowledge to do the job well.
According to the CDC, 35 to 50 percent of U.S. adults can’t swim (over 60 percent for some minority populations). But what does that mean? Why is there no industry standard for swimming proficiency (e.g., 300 yards continuous swim freestyle)? Why aren’t we defining what it means to be able to swim so people really understand whether or not their skill is sufficient? A lot of people think they can swim, but would never consider themselves capable of achieving a common proficiency standard such as that. Isn’t it time to create one? Why not speak a common language that will help people assess their own skill level?
Why are we not advocating for adults (entire families) to learn how to swim? Why are swimming lessons positioned so strongly as only being for children? Being safe in the water is only part swimming skill and mostly sound decision-making.