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Blackpill [glug glug glug] Take the drownpill. 80% of drowning victims are male

Toilets can’t drown :feelsthink:
 
Drownes me. am I right fellas?
 
drowning in soy
 
When you head is filled with nothing but air, you float.
 
Drowning

For other uses, see Drowning (disambiguation) and Drown (disambiguation).
Drowning is defined as respiratory impairmentas a result of being in or under a liquid.[7][10]Drowning typically occurs silently, with only a few people able to wave their hands or call for help.[1] Symptoms following rescue may include breathing problems, vomiting, confusion, or unconsciousness.[2][3]Occasionally symptoms may not appear until up to six hours afterwards.[3] Drowning may be complicated by low body temperature, aspiration of vomit, or acute respiratory distress syndrome.[4][11]
Drowning
Wassilij Grigorjewitsch Perow 002.jpg
Vasily Perov: The Drowned, 1867 painting
SpecialtyCritical care medicine
SymptomsEvent: Often occurs silently with a person found unconscious[1][2]
After rescue: Breathing problems, vomiting, confusion, unconscious[2][3]
ComplicationsHypothermia, aspiration of vomit, acute respiratory distress syndrome[4]
Usual onsetRapid[3]
Risk factorsAlcohol use, epilepsy, low socioeconomic status, access to water[5]
Diagnostic methodBased on symptoms[3]
Differential diagnosisSuicide, seizure, hypoglycemia, heart arrhythmia[2]
PreventionFencing pools, teaching children to swim, safe boating practices[5][6]
TreatmentRescue breathing, CPR, mechanical ventilation[7]
MedicationOxygen therapy, intravenous fluids, vasopressors[7]
Frequency4.5 million (2015)[8]
Deaths324,000 (2015)[9]
Drowning is more common when the weather is warm and among those with frequent access to water.[4][5] Risk factors include alcohol use, epilepsy, and low socioeconomic status.[5] Common locations of drowning include swimming pools, bathtubs, natural bodies of water, and buckets.[3][7] Initially the person holds their breath, which is followed by laryngospasm, and then low oxygen levels.[4] Significant amounts of water typically only enter the lungs later in the process.[4] It may be classified into three types: drowning with death, drowning with ongoing health problems, and drowning with no ongoing health problems.[10]
Efforts to prevent drowning include teaching children to swim, safe boating practices, and limiting or removing access to water such as by fencing pools.[5][6] Treatment of those whose who are not breathing should begin with opening the airway and providing five breaths.[7] In those whose heart is not beatingand who have been underwater for less than an hour CPR is recommended.[7] Survival rates are better among those with a shorter time under the water.[7] Among children who survive poor outcomes occur in about 7.5% of cases.[7]
In 2015, there were an estimated 4.5 million cases of unintentional drowning.[8] That year it resulted in 324,000 deaths making it the third leading cause of death from unintentional injuries after falls and motor vehicle collisions.[9] Of these deaths, 56,000 occurred in children less than five years old.[9] It accounts for 7% of all injury related deaths, with more than 90% of these deaths occurring in developing countries.[5][9] Drowning occurs more frequently in males and the young.[5
 
Drowning

For other uses, see Drowning (disambiguation) and Drown (disambiguation).
Drowning is defined as respiratory impairmentas a result of being in or under a liquid.[7][10]Drowning typically occurs silently, with only a few people able to wave their hands or call for help.[1] Symptoms following rescue may include breathing problems, vomiting, confusion, or unconsciousness.[2][3]Occasionally symptoms may not appear until up to six hours afterwards.[3] Drowning may be complicated by low body temperature, aspiration of vomit, or acute respiratory distress syndrome.[4][11]
Drowning
Wassilij Grigorjewitsch Perow 002.jpg
Vasily Perov: The Drowned, 1867 painting
SpecialtyCritical care medicine
SymptomsEvent: Often occurs silently with a person found unconscious[1][2]
After rescue: Breathing problems, vomiting, confusion, unconscious[2][3]
ComplicationsHypothermia, aspiration of vomit, acute respiratory distress syndrome[4]
Usual onsetRapid[3]
Risk factorsAlcohol use, epilepsy, low socioeconomic status, access to water[5]
Diagnostic methodBased on symptoms[3]
Differential diagnosisSuicide, seizure, hypoglycemia, heart arrhythmia[2]
PreventionFencing pools, teaching children to swim, safe boating practices[5][6]
TreatmentRescue breathing, CPR, mechanical ventilation[7]
MedicationOxygen therapy, intravenous fluids, vasopressors[7]
Frequency4.5 million (2015)[8]
Deaths324,000 (2015)[9]
Drowning is more common when the weather is warm and among those with frequent access to water.[4][5] Risk factors include alcohol use, epilepsy, and low socioeconomic status.[5] Common locations of drowning include swimming pools, bathtubs, natural bodies of water, and buckets.[3][7] Initially the person holds their breath, which is followed by laryngospasm, and then low oxygen levels.[4] Significant amounts of water typically only enter the lungs later in the process.[4] It may be classified into three types: drowning with death, drowning with ongoing health problems, and drowning with no ongoing health problems.[10]
Efforts to prevent drowning include teaching children to swim, safe boating practices, and limiting or removing access to water such as by fencing pools.[5][6] Treatment of those whose who are not breathing should begin with opening the airway and providing five breaths.[7] In those whose heart is not beatingand who have been underwater for less than an hour CPR is recommended.[7] Survival rates are better among those with a shorter time under the water.[7] Among children who survive poor outcomes occur in about 7.5% of cases.[7]
In 2015, there were an estimated 4.5 million cases of unintentional drowning.[8] That year it resulted in 324,000 deaths making it the third leading cause of death from unintentional injuries after falls and motor vehicle collisions.[9] Of these deaths, 56,000 occurred in children less than five years old.[9] It accounts for 7% of all injury related deaths, with more than 90% of these deaths occurring in developing countries.[5][9] Drowning occurs more frequently in males and the young.[5
just ldar
106015
 
Jason's me. @OverBeforeItBegan
 
hmm wonder if that is because foid lifeguards dont want to save ugly males and just want to watch them die, probably
 
His final thread...:feelscry:

ends me
 
Glugs me.

I almost drowned as a kid once. Someone saved my life, and I don't even remember his face.
 
This thread should be pinned.
 
Probs westerns or drunk Russians who can't swim. Also foids almost never swim.
 
Must be becase the vast majority of refugees trying to cross the Mediterranean en masse on top of shitty logs are men. Let Salvini do his thing.
 

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