Wilderness medical emergency

A wilderness medical emergency is a medical emergency which takes place in a wilderness or remote setting which is at least 60 minutes away from definitive care (hospital, clinic, etc.) and presents unique challenges that may require specialized skills, treatment techniques, and knowledge in order to manage the patient for an extended period of time before being evacuated.[1]

Mass casualty incidents

These are incidents which produce an elevated number of injuries, such as blizzards, earthquake, avalanche, landslide, floods and forest fire. Triage is a concern as well as location of victims who may be in dense foliage, rocky and remote locations or covered in mud, snow and debris. Helicopters are used to access remote locations during natural disasters. In other instances, mass casualties have resulted when parties of climbers or explorers suffer the adverse consequences of human error, with or without complications from inclement weather.[2]

Response

Extrication and evacuation

Transporting an injured person out of the wilderness on a stretcher can be a difficult exercise requiring considerable manpower.[3][4] It is advised that at least one person stay with an injured party and that no one attempt to seek help by travelling alone over inhospitable terrain.[3]

First aid

Wilderness first aid (WFA) is the specific discipline of first aid which relates to care in remote areas, where emergency medical services will be difficult to obtain or will take a long time to arrive.

Locating the victim precedes assessment and intervention and in the case of wilderness response is often a difficult matter. Specialists in white water rescue, mountain rescue, mine disaster response and other fields are often employed. In some cases, emergency extrication procedures at incidents such as automobile accidents are required before assessment is possible. Only once the location of the victim has been determined, a trained responder has been dispatched and successfully reached the victim, can the ordinary first aid process begin. Assessment is then enabled and it follows carefully specified protocols which have been refined through a long process of evaluation.

Specific conditions

Certification

Wilderness First Aid is a relatively new field compared to regular or 'urban' first aid. For this reason, there are a number of boards and societies which have been formed in recent years to attempt to establish normalized standards for wilderness first aid certification and wilderness medicine in general. Currently, there are no national standards for wilderness medicine, however one of the most popularly followed curricula is the "National Practice Guidelines for Wilderness Emergency Care" published by the Wilderness Medical Society in 2010.[9]

The American Red Cross Wilderness & Remote First Aid (r.2010) certification is valid for 2 years.[10]

In Canada the first WFA courses were taught in the mid 1980s and the first organization to adopt standards was the Wilderness First Aid and Safety Association of BC (defunct since 1998).[11]

As of 2014, all official BSA high adventure programs (such as Philmont) will require that at least two people (either an adviser or a youth participant) in each crew be currently certified in Wilderness First Aid or the equivalent and Adult CPR/AED from the American Red Cross, American Heart Association, Emergency Care and Safety Institute (ECSI), or American Safety & Health Institute (ASHI). At least one person must be certified in both WFA and CPR for all backpacking and camping activities where a Tour Plan must be filed. The preferred course is the American Red Cross Wilderness and Remote First Aid, which is a sixteen-hour course designed to help in situations where help is not readily available. Several hours may be required for high adventure staff to reach a remote backcountry location after a message is delivered to the nearest staffed camp. First aid and CPR training will result in proper and prompt attention being given to injuries and illnesses. Participants must present current certification cards upon check in to verify this requirement.[12]

First responders

A Wilderness First Responder (72- to 80-hour course) certification is both a higher certification than a Wilderness First Aid (16- to 20-hour course) certification, and may also be used to upgrade an Emergency Medical Technician to a Wilderness Emergency Medical Technician. Outdoor Emergency Care is a National Ski Patrol certification, but it doesn't fully meet the requirements for a WFR certification.[13]

Golden hour

In emergency medicine, some advocates assert that there is a golden hour which refers to a time period lasting from a few minutes to several hours following traumatic injury being sustained by a casualty, during which there is the highest likelihood that prompt medical treatment will prevent death.[14] While most medical professionals agree that delays in definitive care are undesirable, recent peer reviewed literature casts doubt on the validity of the 'golden hour' as it appears to lack a scientific basis. Dr. Bryan Bledsoe, an outspoken critic of the golden hour and other EMS "myths" like critical incident stress management, has indicated that the peer reviewed medical literature does not demonstrate any "magical time" for saving critical patients.[15]

Training and certification organizations

Main article: Wilderness medicine

A number of fellowships are available for emergency medicine graduates including prehospital medicine (emergency medical services), hospice and palliative care, research, undersea and hyperbaric medicine, sports medicine, ultrasound, pediatric emergency medicine, disaster medicine, wilderness medicine, toxicology, and Critical Care Medicine.[16]

Characterization of specific wilderness medical emergencies

See also

References

  1. Castleman, Clifton (2010). The Comprehensive Guide to Wilderness First Aid. ISBN 9781105188947.
  2. http://www.thecityedition.com/2012/First_Aid.html#mass[]
  3. 1 2 Wilkerson, James (2001). "Evacuation". Medicine for mountaineering & other wilderness activities. pp. 25–7. ISBN 978-0-89886-799-2.
  4. Keller, William (2001). "Transporting the Injured". Keller's Outdoor Survival Guide: How to Prevail When Lost, Stranded, or Injured in the Wilderness. p. 88. ISBN 978-1-57223-266-2.
  5. Survival Kit List
  6. Mosier, Michael J.; Heimbach, David M. (2011). "Emergency Care of the Burned Victim". In Auerbach, Paul S. Wilderness Medicine. Elsevier. ISBN 978-1-4557-3356-9.
  7. Symptoms and causes of muscle cramps
  8. 1 2 Cymerman, A; Rock, PB. "Medical Problems in High Mountain Environments. A Handbook for Medical Officers". USARIEM-TN94-2. US Army Research Inst. of Environmental Medicine Thermal and Mountain Medicine Division Technical Report. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  9. http://www.wms.org[]
  10. redcross.org
  11. St. John Ambulance provides a Wilderness First Aid course Archived 20 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. http://www.bsawfa.com/who-requires-wfa.html
  13. Hawkins, Seth C. (2012). "The Relationship Between Ski Patrols and Emergency Medical Services Systems". Wilderness & Environmental Medicine. 23 (2): 106–11. doi:10.1016/j.wem.2012.03.008. PMID 22656654.
  14. American College of Surgeons (2008). Atls, Advanced Trauma Life Support Program for Doctors. Amer College of Surgeons. ISBN 978-1-880696-31-6.
  15. Bledsoe, BE (2002). "The Golden Hour: fact or fiction?". Emergency Medical Services. 31 (6): 105. PMID 12078402.
  16. "Subspecialty Certification". ABEM. Retrieved 29 June 2011.
  17. Butler, Frank K. (2011). "The Eye in the Wilderness". In Auerbach, Paul S. Wilderness Medicine. Elsevier. ISBN 978-1-4557-3356-9.
  18. Mitchell, John D (2004). "Ocular emergencies". In Tintinalli, Judith E; Kelen, Judith E Tintinalli; Gabor D; Stapczynski, J Stephan. Emergency Medicine: A Comprehensive Study Guide (6th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 1449.
  19. MedlinePlus Encyclopedia Eye emergencies

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