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LifestyleHealth & Wellness

Why males take more risks and how to promote healthy risk-taking in teens

Experts say factors from evolution to peer pressure lead men and boys to flirt with danger. But some risk-taking is crucial

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Full of testosterone and with a brain that is still developing, young men can be less likely to look before they leap. Doctors explain the factors behind risky behaviour in males, and how to promote healthy risk-taking in teens. Photo: Shutterstock
Anthea Rowan

On a summer afternoon nine years ago, Mark Raymond Jr dove into Lake Pontchartrain in the US state of Louisiana.

He had not realised how shallow it was – and felt his forehead hit the lake bottom. Three weeks later, he woke up from a medically induced coma, unable to use his legs or hands.

Diving accidents are life-shattering – but not uncommon. They disproportionately affect young men: up to 97 per cent of diving-induced spinal cord injuries occur in males, and most are aged 15 to 29 years.

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“Anybody’s life can change in a split second like mine did,” says Raymond, who went on to found the Split Second Foundation in New Orleans and is its chief executive.

Mark Raymond Jr lies in hospital after his diving accident in 2016. Photo: Mark Raymond Jr
Mark Raymond Jr lies in hospital after his diving accident in 2016. Photo: Mark Raymond Jr

He was fortunate that his friends that day performed CPR and saved his life. He was in his mid-twenties at the time. Since then, he has become an energetic campaigner for spinal cord injury and, in particular, the dangers of diving into shallow water.

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“I wasn’t paying attention to the tide. What I thought was deeper water was not. [I] dove off the boat and hit my head on the sandy bottom, and I shattered the fifth vertebra in my neck, resulting in paralysis,” he writes on his website.

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