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In many countries, drowning is one of the leading causes of death for children up to 14 years.
About 6500 drowning deaths occur in the United States every year, and about 140,000 worldwide (estimate). Near drowning incidents are estimated to be 2 to 500 times the number of drowning incidents. Most of the victims are either young children, especially boys, or young adolescent males. Drowning is the second most likely cause of injury and death for children up to 14 years after car accidents. Surveys indicate that 10% of the children under 5 experienced a situation with a high risk of drowning. Males in general are much more likely to drown than females. Also, 90% of the drownings occur in freshwater. Drowning related injuries is the fifth most likely cause of accidental death in the US. The drowning cases in the US can be sorted as follows:
Drowning is caused by immersion in fluid. This requires the victim to be immersed in fluid and to be unable or unwilling to rescue himself. Most drownings occur when the victim passes out or is exhausted and unable to access air. This may be for example a swimmer with a heart attack in the ocean, exhaustion and coma due to hypothermia after breaking through the surface of a frozen lake, or merely a drunk person passing out in a small puddle. A few centimeters of water are sufficient for drowning if the victim lies face down on the water. Another cause of drownings are adverse water and weather conditions, including waves and currents like tides and rivers. Drowning may also be due to strong negative buoyancy, where a denser than water item forces the victim underwater. Finally, drowning may be caused by another person forcing the victim under water, i.e. murder. (For a list of causes see swimming)
Submerging the face into water causes the mammalian diving reflexSubmerging the face into water causes the mammalian diving reflex which is found in all mammals, but especially in marine mammals as for example whales and seals. This reflex puts the body into energy saving modus to maximize the time that can be spent un, which is found in all mammalsSubclass Monotremata Monotremata Subclass Marsupialia Didelphimorphia Paucituberculata Microbiotheria Dasyuromorphia Peramelemorphia Notoryctemorphia Diprotodontia Subclass Placentalia Xenarthra Dermoptera Desmostylia Scandentia Primates Rodentia Lagomorp, but especially in marine mammalsA marine mammal is a mammal that is primarily ocean-dwelling or depends on the ocean for its food. There are five groups of marine mammals: # Order Sirenia the manatee, dugong, and sea cow #Order Carnivora family Ursidae the Polar Bear #Order Carnivora in as for example whalesWhales are the largest species of exclusively aquatic placental mammals, dfsgRSFNjg A complete up-to-date taxonomical listing of all cetacean species, including all whales is maintained at the Cetacea article. Anatomy Like all mammals, whales breathe air and sealsOtariidae Phocidae Odobenidae Pinnipeds are large marine mammals belonging to the Pinnipedia a family (sometimes a suborder or superfamily, depending on the classification scheme) of the order Carnivora. The true seals, sea lions, fur seals and Walrus are. This reflex puts the body into energy saving modus to maximize the time a person can stay under water. The effect of this reflex is larger in cold water than in warm water, and includes three factors:
Thus both a conscious and an unconscious person can survive longer without oxygen under water than in a comparable situation on dry land.