Learning from Diving Incidents: Justice, Stories, and Accountability with Gareth Lock
Description
In this episode, we reflect on the article “Asking Why. Telling Stories. Owning Accountability” and its lessons for both the diving community and pre-hospital care. The piece explores how adverse events are too often met with blame and silence, when what’s needed is open storytelling, systemic accountability, and visible learning. Drawing on three academic theses, the author argues for a shift from backward-looking, individual blame towards forward-looking, relational accountability approaches that foster trust, resilience, and safer systems.
Barriers such as fear of reputational harm and legal concerns frequently stifle honest reflection. Yet, the article suggests that structured, context-rich narratives can create a culture of genuine learning and justice, allowing organisations to adapt and prevent future harm.
For pre-hospital care, the parallels are striking. Just like in diving, providers face high-stakes environments where “first stories” may oversimplify, overlooking the complex contexts in which clinicians operate. Whether in remote environments, critical incidents, or everyday EMS work, learning requires moving past blame and toward systems thinking. Transparent communication, structured debriefs, and the courage to challenge norms are as vital to paramedics and pre-hospital teams as they are to divers and expedition leaders.
By embracing this approach, telling richer stories, strengthening feedback loops, and redefining accountability, we can better support both patients and providers in the moments when things go wrong. Read the blog post here: https://www.thehumandiver.com/blog/asking-why-telling-stories-and-owning-accountability-lessons-for-diving
You can contact Gareth Lock here: https://www.thehumandiver.com/contact-us-2025