SH247: At a system level, we don't learn from diving fatalities, and here's why episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 24, 2026 · 17 MIN

SH247: At a system level, we don't learn from diving fatalities, and here's why

from Counter-Errorism in Diving: Applying Human Factors to Diving

This episode explains why the diving industry struggles to learn from fatalities and argues that the problem is not one bad decision or one person, but the whole system. Using the death of 18-year-old diver Linnea Mills as an example, it shows how normal people, doing what made sense at the time, can be caught by gaps in training, supervision, equipment, communication, and emergency planning. The focus is on moving beyond neat, blame-based “first stories” and instead telling messier “second stories” that explore context, pressure, trade-offs, and gradual drift away from safety margins. The episode looks at ideas like normalisation of deviance, weak feedback loops, authority gradients, and the gap between what rules say should happen and what really happens on dives. The key message is that safety improves when we change conditions, not just criticise people: by building psychological safety, matching supervision to the real task, checking equipment properly, planning for emergencies that fit the location, learning from near misses, and raising standards above the bare minimum. Learning from tragedy requires courage, honest stories, and system-level change, but it is possible—and it starts before the next dive.Original blog: https://www.thehumandiver.com/blog/we-don-t-learn-from-diving-fatalities-and-here-s-whyLinks: Webinar about Linnea Mills: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lu4tc8gtNio&t=3sNo learning focused investigation process in diving: https://www.thehumandiver.com/blog/learning-reviews-in-divingCompliance can give an illusion of safety: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNhmxz2_adcWhat conditions made it harder to do the ‘right’ thing and easier to do the ‘wrong’ thing?Creating the conditions and space for speaking up: https://www.thehumandiver.com/blog/top-tips-for-diving-instructors-leadership-creating-the-space-for-others-to-be-heardHaving difficult conversations as an instructor: https://www.thehumandiver.com/blog/top-tips-for-diving-instructors-communication-the-difficult-kindTEDS open question acronym: https://www.thehumandiver.com/blog/communications-ask-better-questionsPsychological safety blogs: Blog 1. Blog 2. Blog 3. Blog 4. Blog 5.Debrief model: https://www.thehumandiver.com/debriefDiving Talks video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNhmxz2_adcChild welfare changes: https://www.collaborative-safety.com/collaborative-safety-reading-packetTags: - english gareth lock safety safety culture system safety

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SH247: At a system level, we don't learn from diving fatalities, and here's why

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This episode is 17 minutes long.

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This episode was published on January 24, 2026.

What is this episode about?

This episode explains why the diving industry struggles to learn from fatalities and argues that the problem is not one bad decision or one person, but the whole system. Using the death of 18-year-old diver Linnea Mills as an example, it shows how...

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