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| Taking Health Care Outdoors |
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WHERE DOES IT HURT? Weiss hopes
to send doctors to remote areas.
Glenn Matsumura |
Eric A. Weiss might be
handy to bring along on your next backpacking trip.
An assistant professor of surgery in emergency medicine,
he has written several books about medical care in the
wild and administered care for a National Geographic
team excavating Mayan ruins in Belize. Now, he’s
established Stanford’s first wilderness medicine
fellowship, passing on know-how about everything from
treating altitude sickness at the base of Mount Everest
to improvising stitches with duct tape.
Arthur Kaminski, an emergency medicine physician from
Detroit, is the first fellow. He got his start in wilderness
medicine when he constructed a makeshift splint for
his companion’s broken arm during a trek in the
Brazilian jungle. This year he’ll conduct research
on divers’ blood chemistry to identify the most
effective treatments for the bends.
Weiss says he hopes the fellowships produce physicians
who can be a resource for organizations like Doctors
Without Borders and search-and-rescue operations. The
yearlong program includes a two-month field experience
in which the fellows apply their knowledge.
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