Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
Browse

What is new in altitude- and cold-related illnesses of travel: appraisal and summary of the updated guidelines from the Wilderness Medical Society

Download (335.75 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-13, 12:00 authored by Arghavan Omidi, Gregory D Hawley, Dylan Kain, Farah Jazuli, Milca Meconnen, Mark Polemidiotis, Nam Phuong Do, Olamide Egbewumi, Andrea K Boggild

Wilderness medicine is a rapidly evolving field and has benefited from expanded research efforts. Moreover, with an escalating occurrence of severe and cataclysmic global climatologic events, human illness arising from interaction with wilderness and recreational environments warrants increasing consideration. Within the last decade, the Wilderness Medical Society (WMS) has aggregated research findings and created guidelines on prevention measures and therapeutic options for acute altitude illness, frostbite injuries, and avalanche and non-avalanche snow burials. As new research emerges, some guidelines have been updated to reflect the most current and sound scientific conclusions. In this review, we have synthesized the evidence-based guidelines and have reviewed the quality of the guidelines according to the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation (AGREE) II framework. Further research efforts can expand the scope of evidence-based practice in travel medicine and ideally standardize the implementation of recommendations within both pre-travel and post-travel medical practices.

Funding

Departments of Medicine at the University of Toronto and the University Health Network

History

Data Availability Statement

All data are presented in the manuscript.

Comments

The original article is available at https://www.mdpi.com/

Published Citation

Omidi A, et al. What is new in altitude- and cold-related illnesses of travel: appraisal and summary of the updated guidelines from the Wilderness Medical Society. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2025;22(2):284.

Publication Date

14 February 2025

PubMed ID

40003509

Department/Unit

  • Undergraduate Research

Publisher

MDPI

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)