Gian,
You might want to read up a little about Human Factors before dismissing it in the way you are...
SKYbrary - HFACS
HFACS Level 2: Preconditions for Unsafe Acts - this is broken into 3 subsections; Environment, Condition of Operators and Personnel
Environmental is then broken into Technical and Physical.
So all the system safety designs you are talking about ARE covered by Human Factors!
Regards
ABSOLUTELY the SHEEL model explains clearly the problem on it´s diferent interactions.
Safety in any industry or activitie is always function of 4 pillars; Man, machine, procedures and environment. As James Reason has put it you can change procedures, machine and environment but you can not change the man... I´m not pretending that the DIVER is at the root cause, the MAN aplies to all human interference in the SYSTEM, thus instructor, design, instruction, diver (with all the social factors included)...etc etc..
Unfortunately investigations of diving "accidents" i´d rather call them mishaps follow the
Rhumb line, insted of a strait and clear line, but again the cost of human life is cheep if one here and one there once in a while, on the probabilistic risk assessments that have certaninly been done, thus not justifying action on the part of the industry. We have seen these happening in the aviation industry so frequently so who really cares about some dudes diving CCR ??
Someone put it quite cleverly that an accident in a "working scenario" is trated according the national HSE procedures including investigation.
Remeber however that HSE standards for DIVING (as work), including diving equipment specifications, and diving procedures, does not apply on the recreational diving industry at least in Portugal.
If i´m not mistaken investigation of accidents occuring in the sea falls under the maritime authority umbrela and investigations to those are requested by the public prosecutor AFAIK.
I´m not familiar with any investigation of this nature (fatality in diving) been ever disclosed to general public or even to amateur diving organizations since 1990 in this country.
Unfortunately SMS and proactive safety are concepts still too much ahead for public sercvice entities in general. Resilience engeneering, the intrinsic ability of a system to adjust its functioning prior to, during, or following changes and disturbances, so that it can sustain required operations under both expected and unexpected conditions is still a unknow science for a vast majority of important diving industry actors.
To be or nor to be "Selective breeding" or "Selective breathing" that´s the question...
we should include in the syllabus of the diving courses a little bit of William Shakespeare's play Hamlet more specificaly his famous opening phrase in the soliloquy, when Hamlet questions the meaning of life, and whether or not it is worthwhile to stay alive when life contains so many hardships. He comes to the conclusion that the main reason people stay alive is due to a fear of death and uncertainty at what lies beyond life.