Wilderness and Search & Rescue weekend
Posted June 8th, 2009 by danielPosted in Past events | No Comments
“An Introduction to Wilderness and Search & Rescue Medicine”
29th-31st May, 2009
Blue Mountains, NSW
4:30 on Friday evening saw a group of intrepid mountain rescue trainee’s meeting at the Sydney University car park, backpacks slung over shoulders and climbing shoes donned. It was the beginning of the first Wilderness Medicine Society training camp which was to be held over two days in the Blue Mountains. The aim of the weekend was to bring together students from different universities to learn leadership and teamwork skills whilst developing a systematic approach to search and rescue, and managing emergency situations in a wilderness setting.
The Wilderness Medicine Society was inaugurated in March 2008 with the intention of introducing medical students to the field of wilderness and expedition medicine. A number of highly successful events were held in 2008, including a weekend hike through the Royal National Park, and talks by Glenn Singleman, Keith Burgess and Edi Albert.
The weekend was facilitated by Dr Edi Albert and Vonna Keller, who have years of wilderness experience between them, having recently spent the summer at Casey Station in the Antarctic. Edi has a great love of the outdoors which he combines with an interest in both medical education and remote medicine. He was previously Head of General Practice at the Tasmanian Medical School, but has developed a post-graduate training program in Expedition Medicine in Tasmania. He has travelled widely, including climbing expeditions to the Himalaya, kayaking in the Arctic, and closer to home, kayaking across Bass Strait. Vonna has a wide range of experience working in the outdoors, from being an instructor in rock climbing, vertical rescue, kayaking, and white water rafting to working as a field guide with film crews in Antarctica. They made a dynamic training team for the basics of search and rescue.
During the weekend, theoretical lectures involving primary and secondary survey and dealing with an unfavourable environment were combined with the more practical skills of managing spinal injuries, rolls and carries, and improvising stretchers and splints. Knowing there was to be a search and rescue exercise on Sunday afternoon, the morning was given to practising search techniques and triage. The weekend culminated in an exciting exercise involving 3 “real” wilderness patients with a variety of injuries, including femur and ankle fractures, C-spine instability, hysteria and hallucinations, all of whom were expeditiously rescued and returned home.
The Wilderness Search and Rescue Medicine camp involved medical students from the University of Sydney, Notre Dame, the University of Wollongong and the University of Western Sydney, and was a fantastic opportunity to meet medical students from other universities and share information and ideas. This weekend would not have been possible without the continued support and generous funding from NRHSN, Mirage and MDA, and given its resounding success we look forward to providing more events like it in the future.











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