Good morning. Thank you for the opportunity to present today.
I'm Dr. Steve Beerman, and I am co-chair of the Canadian Drowning Prevention Coalition. I am here with Mr. Bobby White, a member of our board of directors. We're here to ask the government to make a new strategic investment in the Canadian Drowning Prevention Coalition to reduce drowning risks and enhance drowning prevention.
The Canadian Drowning Prevention Coalition is respectfully requesting that the Government of Canada invest $25 million over five years to support drowning risk reduction in Canada. This investment would improve research and data collection, thus improving effective prevention, policy development, reporting and governance.
The Canadian Drowning Prevention Coalition is a new, non-governmental organization that brings together many multisectoral stakeholders with key focused targets, inclusion and shared leadership. The coalition was created to enhance the focus and impact of this effort after the World Health Organization's “Global Report on Drowning”. That report identified drowning as a multisectoral public health issue in all nations and recommended that each nation create a national strategy and plan for drowning mortality risk reduction and non-fatal drowning risk reduction.
Mortality data in Canada has been collected and analyzed by the Canadian Red Cross and the Lifesaving Society for more than 20 years. This has focused on drowning mortality.
Non-fatal drowning data and reporting are more challenging and most needed. This impacts Canadian rescue services, health services, social support systems and employment and economic capacity for families and communities. The assessment of the drowning burden is currently incomplete. We need to improve the data, the reporting and the learning. A full understanding of this burden will inform legislation, policy and community actions and behaviours.
We know that more than 400 Canadians are victims of fatal drownings each year. This accounts for more than 8,000 fatal drownings and more than 40,000 non-fatal drowning events in Canada over the past 20 years. This is not the full picture. There are exclusions from this data, including drownings from suicides and homicides, and drowning deaths involving complex circumstances. We need to understand this drowning burden more fully and with all its impacts, to speed the rate of decline and improve the inequities.
The drowning mortality burden disproportionately impacts indigenous Canadians—that is, first nations, Inuit and Métis—new Canadians, rural and northern residents, children and young males. These key targets align with many Government of Canada priority target areas.
The Government of Canada's investment would improve our understanding and the reduction of tragic, preventable drowning. That investment would be put to use to enhance data and research-gathering and support.
We would like you to implement survival swim training for all Canadians, and very specifically for new Canadians. This would reduce the drowning risk.
We would also like you to amend the small vessel regulations for vessels under nine metres to require PFDs or life jackets to be worn by each person on or in the small craft. This would make small craft vessel recreation and vocation safer.
We would like you to implement mandatory CPR training as a prerequisite to obtaining a motor vehicle driver's licence in Canada. This would empower Canadians to save lives.
We would also like the Government of Canada to assist in the creation and establishment of a drowning review board for drowning mortality in supervised settings and in single events involving more than five deaths. This would better inform and protect Canadians.
As well, we would like you to implement consistent, evidence-based pool-fencing legislation and compliance across Canada. This would make our homes, our residents, our schools and our institutions safer.
Multiple Government of Canada ministries and agencies have a mandated interest in this issue. Canada should be a leader in multisectoral drowning prevention, with collaborative shared leadership. This collaborative partnership would accelerate the impact of drowning risk reduction and burden reduction.
Canada can do a better job of reducing drowning risks, deaths and the burden felt by our health care system, our economy, our families and our communities. Government investments in research, data collection and proactive prevention are reasonable requests and would greatly assist in reducing drowning among Canadians who are at greatest risk.
Thank you. We look forward to answering questions when the time is appropriate.