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And Bradley Maron thinks the sand-related deaths are less well-documented than shark attacks. The father and son based their report largely on news media accounts and Internet searches. Most of the incidents were from the last 10 years, when Internet reports were available. Overall, they counted 31 recreational sand hole deaths since 1985 in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand. They counted another 21 incidents in which a person was rescued from a collapse, in several cases by bystanders who performed CPR. The victims, mostly boys, ranged in age from 3 to 21 years, with the average age about 12. Unattended construction sites have long posed dangers, and one incident in the Marons' compilation
-- involving three girls who died in East Milton, Fla., in 1998 -- occurred in a rain-soaked clay pit, when an embankment collapsed. Those deaths, if added to the others, bring the U.S. death tally to 23. Maron and others advise the public not to let young kids play in sand unattended and not to get in a hole deeper than your knees. On Martha's Vineyard, lifeguards are instructed to order children and adults out of any hole deeper than a child's waist and to kick sand in to fill the
holes, Arnold said. Occasionally, some parents protest. "They'll say 'You're ruining my kids' day!' I say
'I don't care,'" Arnold said. Mavis Gauruder, who lives in Fort Mill, S.C., said she's tried to issue similar warnings, like the time she came upon a father digging a hole with a garden shovel for his young son. She went up to the pair and warned them of the dangers. The man seemed unmoved, so she finally told him she'd had a tragedy in her family involving a hole collapse. "I asked them to fill in the hole. They did, but they looked at me like I was interfering," she said. ___ On the Net:
http://www.nejm.org
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