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Wilderness Medicine and Extreme Sports

by Solo Canada Posted in Wilderness Medicine .

In most extreme sports, athletes perform multiple sporting activities over rugged, often remote, wilderness terrains. These sporting activities may include, but are not limited to, hiking, trail running, mountain biking, caving, technical climbing, fixed-line mountaineering, flat- and white-water boating, and orienteering.

Over the past three decades, the popularity of extreme sports all over the world has grown with increasing numbers of events and participants each year. The provision of on-site medical care during these events is essential to ensure the health and safety of the athletes and thus the success of these sports.

As the popularity and athletes’ participation in these activities grows, so does the number of injuries and fatalities. Most especially with extreme sports that are held in remote environments.

Because of their extreme nature, sports that are organized in remote environments represent a new and unique area of wilderness medicine.

Since a wide variety of illnesses and injuries occur during these events, the medical support plan should provide for proper personnel and equipment and supplies to provide care for a wide range of illnesses and injuries.

Organizers of events should encourage athletes to rest a day or two in between different stages of the events either in their hotels or taking a walk in the park. One of the ways athletes can relax is by playing slot games online. They can get bonus on account registration to play and win some cool cash.

Also, organizers can lay out some penalties against athletes participating without carrying some first aid kits or refusing some first aid treatments during competitions because it might slow them down during the race. Such attitudes or mentality can lead to fatalities.

Extreme sports and wilderness medicine have a close-knitted relationship that borders on one does not advance without the other. The relationship is mutual and should be encouraged.

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