Enhancing Drowning Prevention Efforts in Zambia: A Comprehensive Assessment

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Abstract

Aim

This study examines the drowning prevention landscape in Zambia, identifying challenges, existing initiatives, and opportunities for improvement.

Subject and Methods

A convergent mixed methods approach integrated quantitative drowning case data from a WHO structured questionnaire with qualitative insights from structured and open ended responses. Data were collected in 2022 from 10 representatives across government, NGOs, community leadership, and public health expertise, consolidated via a stakeholder workshop. Quantitative data were summarized descriptively, while qualitative data were thematically analyzed to identify key themes, with findings integrated to assess convergence and divergence.

Results

Stakeholders identified males, children, youths, water related workers (e.g., fishers), and older adults as high risk groups, with inland water bodies (e.g., Zambezi River, Lake Bangweulu) as primary drowning locations during fishing, transportation, and water collection. Zambia Police reported 89 drowning deaths in 2022 (88.8% male, n=79; 11.2% female, n=10), primarily among individuals aged 30–49 years (n=50). Key barriers to drowning prevention include the absence of a national coordination mechanism, limited implementation of interventions (e.g., swim education, physical barriers), weak enforcement of boating safety laws, and fragmented data systems. National strategies lack specific targets, and no legislation mandates lifeguards or pool fencing.

Conclusion

A coordinated, multi sectoral approach involving capacity development, stakeholder partnerships, advocacy, and international support is critical to address these gaps and reduce drowning mortality in Zambia.

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