The Wilderness Medical Society Wilderness & Environmental Medicine Journal Vol 21 No 2 2010 Selected Table of Contents
Posted: October 15, 2010 Filed under: First Aid Leave a commentIf you are not a member of the Wilderness Medical Society, and you are in the field of Outdoor Recreation you should be.
- Editorial: In Tribute to Charlie Houston
- Editorial: Search and Rescue Activity on Denali, 1990 to 2008
- Editorial: Sidecountry Rescue—Who Should Respond to Ski Resort Out-of-Bounds Rescues?
- Original Research: Search and Rescue Activity on Denali, 1990 – 2008
- Original Research: End-Tidal Partial Pressure of Carbon Dioxide and Acute Mountain Sickness in the First 24 Hours Upon Ascent to Cusco Peru (3326 meters)
- Original Research: Large Snake Size Suggests Increased Snakebite Severity in Patients Bitten by Rattlesnakes in Southern California
- Case Report: Frostbite in a Sherpa
- Brief Report: Detection and Management of Hypothermia at a Large Outdoor Endurance Event in the United Kingdom
- Review Article: Wilderness Medical Society Consensus Guidelines for the Prevention and Treatment of Acute Altitude Illness
- Original Research: Adverse Encounters With Alligators in the United States: An Update
- The Wilderness Instructor: Advanced Wilderness Life Support Education Using High-Technology Patient Simulation
The article Wilderness Medical Society Consensus Guidelines for the Prevention and Treatment of Acute Altitude Illness is very important to anyone working in any alpine environment. A new program, possibly a standard of care, has been developed, and you should know about it.
The same goes if you are an instructor in the wilderness medicine field and the article Advanced Wilderness Life Support Education Using High-Technology Patient Simulation.
For information on why a membership to the Wilderness Medical Society is a great idea go here. To subscribe go to the Wilderness Medical Society go here.
Copyright 2010 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law, Recreaton.Law@Gmail.com

