Safety
Issues Related to Hunting in Elevated Stands
In 2002, the
International Hunter Education Association (IHEA) conducted
a survey of over 1,000 hunters in North Carolina and Vermont.
The purpose was to gather information to determine safety
issues related to hunting from elevated stands. The report
overview states:
- only a few
hunters (7%) who use elevated hunting stands had actually
experienced an accident
- only 22%
of those who had experienced an accident had required
any medical treatment
- most hunters
who had experienced an accident had not used a fall-restraint
device
- typically,
hunters who had experienced an accident had been climbing
into or out of their elevated hunting stand when the accident
occurred
- most elevated
stand accidents occurred in daylight and in clear weather
- most hunters
had taken a hunter safety course, but roughly half the
courses did not address elevated hunting stand safety
- although a
strong majority of hunters indicated that they were concerned
about elevated hunting stand safety, most hunters indicated
that it was not likely they
would be injured in an elevated stand accident
- most hunters
who had been involved in an accident felt that they did
not take as many precautions as they could have to prevent
the accident
- most elevated
hunting stands that were in use at the time of an accident
did not have a shooting or safety rail
- most hunters
who had been involved in an accident said that their elevated
stand was not defective, and
- most hunters
who had been involved in an accident changed their hunting
techniques after the accident.
The full report
is available at: http://www.ihea.com/docs/Research1
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