Back to news
26 Jan 2016 | News

Lessons in High Altitude Medicine

1 min Read

70% Complete

A training on high altitude mountain medicine to prevent and treat altitude related sicknesses was organised by the Cryosphere Initiative of the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) 15 January 2016 in ICIMOD headquarters. Twenty-five participants learned the health risks and treatment for high altitude and cold-related illnesses and injuries.

Familiarity about the management and treatment of altitude related sickness can save lives in absence of immediate medical help in the mountains. Experts within ICIMOD’s Cryosphere Initiative and partner institutions work regularly in high altitude, often well above 5000 metres, to collect data on glacier mass balance, snow, weather and hydrological conditions in the region.

Anna Sinisalo, a glaciologist with ICIMOD who initiated the training said her field work is usually carried out without an accompanying medical professional.

‘Mountainous terrain and variable weather conditions make it difficult for the teams in the field to rely on immediate evacuation in case of emergency’, Sinisalo said.

Mountain medicine expert Dr Emmanuel Cauchy explains oxygen levels at different altitudes.

Training was tailored to fill the gap between medical professionals and what individual members on expedition can do to help themselves in case of an emergency situation.

International mountain medicine experts Dr Emmanuel Cauchy and Dr Sandra Leal of the Mountain Medicine Institute for Training and Research (IFREMMONT, France) conducted the training.

Participants were familiarised with the process of acclimatisation, as well as how to identify symptoms and stages of altitude sickness and other altitude related sicknesses and how to prevent and treat them in field conditions. They learned about the importance of effective communication between the field team members and a medical doctor and preparation and the use of well-equipped first aid kit in the field.

During the two day training, the participants also received training on the use Gamow bag (an inflatable hyperbaric chamber) and on primary care including the use of backpacks, clothing and trekking poles to make temporary stretchers and bandages. Decision making in an emergency situation was emphasized including the crucial questions about when and how to evacuate.

Participants were tested on the knowledge they acquired during the course. All felt the training provided them new skills for their future work in the field.

Making a temporary stretcher from items readily available in the field – backpacks.

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

Related Content

Continue exploring this topic

13 Jul 2015 Atmosphere Initiative
ICIMOD supports helicopter relief and rescue missions

Within hours after the earthquake struck Nepal on 25 April 2015, help from overseas started arriving at Kathmandu airport. Soon ...

25 May 2015 News
ICIMOD provides relief to earthquake-affected local staff

In the aftermath of the Great Earthquake of 25 April that ripped through north-central Nepal, ICIMOD put together ...

25 Mar 2015 News
Local Stakeholders in the Koshi basin receive Training on WUMP Facilitation

A four-day training on Water Use Master Plans (WUMPs) facilitation was jointly organized by HELVETAS ...

11 Dec 2015 News
The Himalayan Climate and Water Atlas: Impact of Climate Change on Water Resources in Five of Asia’s Major River Basins

The first atlas of its kind, this new publication offers a comprehensive, regional understanding of the changing climate ...

3 Sep 2019 KDKH
The KDKH’s transboundary working group to study impacts of GLOF events in the Koshi basin

In June 2019, a study that used declassified military satellite data showed that a staggering

8 Mar 2019 Gender in Koshi
Breaking Taboos: My Parents’ Stand for Gender Equality

Growing up, our sense of the world – all that is right in it and all that is wrong – ...

8 Apr 2016 News
Landscape Journey in Myanmar

A multidisciplinary team was organised in the Mu Lar-Nam Ru watershed area of Putao district in Kachin, Myanmar late February ...

‘Dhuwa’ Film Educates on Air Pollution

  ‘Dhuwa’, a short telefilm about air pollution resulting from open fires premiered on 1 October 2015 at Kumari Hall in ...