Diving With The Injured
Diving with the Injured is a charitable programme that takes wounded and injured service personnel to diving trips around the world as part of their rehabilitation, building resilience and confidence.
Also joining the diving trips (and paying their own fares) are military medical personnel that will have treated military patients at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham.
See for yourselves what an amazing trip this is on the video below...
Water Therapy
Scuba Diving Helps Injured Soldiers Reclaim Their Lives
Diving with the Injured was founded by Colonel Mark Foster who is the Military Clinical Director at RCDM and a Plastic reconstructive surgeon at the Royal Centre for Defence Medicine based at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham. Additionally, Mark is a British Sub Aqua Club Advanced Instructor and holds the highest military scuba diving qualifications. He is also Chairman of the DMSDC (yes, he is a busy man!).
Mark arrived at RCDM in 2010 during a busy period when many injured soldiers were still being admitted from the front lines of Afghanistan. By chance, a soldier under Mark's care was a recreational scuba diver. With multiple trauma injuries that resulted in an above-knee amputation, the patient vented his frustration that he would never be able to dive again. Mark immediately recognised that getting this gentleman back in the water could complement his recovery both physically and mentally. Keen to promote a positive mindset, Mark set the challenge to have him diving again within six months.
Support military veterans
The success of this interaction was the catalyst for Diving with the Injured which was formed in 2012. Mark not only trains injured service personnel to dive, but also military medical staff to act as support divers.
DWI continues to support military veterans who have been medically discharged on the grounds of injury or sickness including post-traumatic stress disorders.
DWI has the mission to take injured veterans on a trip of a lifetime to warm climate waters that are less offensive to their injuries. It is one week of the year when in their own words, ‘they feel normal’. Accompanied by serving military nurses who have seen everything imaginable, their disabilities disappear. No stares, no sympathy, just lots of healing banter that goes both ways.
The effect of water
Diving is one sport that due to the weightless effect of water, people with disabilities can swim alongside their able-bodied ‘buddy’ as an equal. Some of the veterans have even become instructors themselves. Diving is a very expensive sport with one set of club diving equipment costing close to a thousand pounds.
Despite their injuries, many of the veterans have been able to secure employment outside of the military and can make their own financial contributions. Equally, many are dependent solely on a medical pension. Without donations to DWI, many would never have had the opportunity to try diving, or like Mark’s first injured diver, have the belief they could continue to do a sport they thought would be impossible.
To help support these incredible experiences for our military personnel on their road to recovery, please email: charities@uhb.nhs.uk or call 0121 371 4852.