Royal Life Saving Society Australia named as founding member of Global Alliance for Drowning Prevention
Royal Life Saving Society - Australia has joined a new global initiative led by the World Health Organization (WHO) to address preventable deaths from drowning. The Global Alliance for Drowning Prevention (GADP) was launched at an event in Geneva to mark UN World Drowning Prevention Day, held each year on 25th July.
Royal Life Saving Society - Australia is honoured to have been selected to join the Alliance at its inception.
The World Health Organization (WHO) describes the Alliance acting as a semi-formal network of partners who will work together to coordinate, strengthen, enhance, and expand efforts to prevent drowning deaths, aligned with the WHO's priorities. The first task of the Alliance will be to develop a Global Strategy for Drowning Prevention.
Royal Life Saving Society - Australia is pleased to play a role and advises “we undertake to promote the capacities, passions, and resources of lifesaving groups across the globe. We commit to working with colleagues at Surf Life Saving Australia, and other groups across the Australian water safety community, to ensure we all contribute to the success of the Alliance.
“Royal Life Saving Society - Australia takes this challenge seriously, and we trust that the Global Alliance for Drowning Prevention will lift us all into collective, collaborative, and collegial action, focused entirely on the interests of people and communities affected by drowning, all over the world.”
Sadly, every year drowning is the cause of more than 236,000 deaths, 2.5 million over the past 10 years. More than 90% of those drowning deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. Some countries in the Indo-pacific region experience drowning rates 20-25 times higher than those in Australia.
A central aim of the Global Alliance for Drowning Prevention is to accelerate drowning prevention efforts across UN agencies, Governments, and non-state actors.
WHO is joined by International Maritime Organization (IMO), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), and UNICEF. Each brings the potential to integrate drowning prevention across sustainable development agendas.
Royal Life Saving Society - Australia is pleased to join other non-state actors, Royal National Lifeboat Institution UK; the Centre for Injury Prevention and Research, Bangladesh; the George Institute for Global Health; and Bloomberg Philanthropies. Each brings an impressive track record.
Since its formation in 2005 the Centre for Injury Prevention and Research, Bangladesh has been the frontline in the fight to address drowning in low- and middle-income contexts, giving global efforts important interventions like Anchals and SwimSafe.
Royal National Lifeboat Institution UK works across many countries, but perhaps its most critical role has been high level advocacy contributing to drowning prevention resolutions being adopted by the United Nations (2021) and World Health Assembly (2023).
Bloomberg Philanthropies is seeding national efforts in key countries including Bangladesh, Vietnam, Uganda, Ghana, India, and the United States.
The George Institute for Global Health has a vast network of inspiring and diverse research programs across many health themes including drowning.
For Royal Life Saving Society - Australia the Global Alliance has been a long-term aspiration and share “way back when the International Life Saving World Conference on Drowning Prevention 2011 was convened in Vietnam, we chose the theme of ‘building a global platform to reduce drowning’.”
At the time more than 550 colleagues dreamed of the elevation of drowning prevention on the global health agenda, the scale-up of interventions, mobilisation resources and the creation of a partnership across United Nations agencies, governments, drowning prevention, water safety and lifesaving organisations, and donors.
The Alliance will be discussed further at the World Conference on Drowning Prevention in Perth from 4th to 7th December 2023, where it is likely that conference participants will have direct opportunities to contribute to the development of the Alliance and the strategy for drowning prevention.
Click here for conference details in the Australasian Leisure Management calendar.
Click here for more information on WHO activities on drowning prevention.
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