You’re right, it’s not per session—but it isn’t per year either. On closer examination it looks like they’re calculating the risk of death over the ten years surveyed (unless the 31 deaths reported are annualized, which I don’t think they are), which is an absolutely terrible bottom line—but fine, it makes the annual risk of death 1 in 566,000. I also notice that the population estimate is identical to that for running and cycling, so it’s probably some sort of very crude estimate of Germans involved in sports. Ugh. At least the climbing stats look more reliable.
Incidentally, an annual risk of death of 1 in 566,000 and a hundred sessions per year (two a week with time off for good behavior) gives us a per-act risk of 0.017 micromorts, about equal to driving four miles in a car.
You’re right, it’s not per session—but it isn’t per year either. On closer examination it looks like they’re calculating the risk of death over the ten years surveyed (unless the 31 deaths reported are annualized, which I don’t think they are), which is an absolutely terrible bottom line—but fine, it makes the annual risk of death 1 in 566,000. I also notice that the population estimate is identical to that for running and cycling, so it’s probably some sort of very crude estimate of Germans involved in sports. Ugh. At least the climbing stats look more reliable.
Incidentally, an annual risk of death of 1 in 566,000 and a hundred sessions per year (two a week with time off for good behavior) gives us a per-act risk of 0.017 micromorts, about equal to driving four miles in a car.