Inside the ER at Mt. Everest
Dr. Luanne Freer, founder of the mountain’s emergency care center, sees hundreds of patients each climbing season at the foot of the Himalayas
- By Molly Loomis
- Smithsonian.com, June 01, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
It was during that year, on a sojourn up to Everest Base Camp, that Freer hatched the plan of developing a satellite clinic for the Himalayan Rescue Association at the base of the famed peak. While many expeditions brought their own doctors, there was no formal facility, which Freer knew could help increase the level of care. While working at Periche, Freer had seen numerous patients sent down from Everest Base Camp, and the gap between many doctors’ experience and the realities of expedition medicine concerned her.
“I saw several well-intentioned doctors nearly kill their patients because they didn’t understand or hadn’t learned proper care of altitude illness and wilderness medicine,” she says. The mountain environment had always held an allure for Freer. Upon finishing her residency in emergency medicine at Georgetown University, she headed west for the mountains, landing a job as a doctor in Yellowstone National Park, where she still works full time, serving as the park’s medical director. Freer is a past president of the Wilderness Medical Society, and her unique niche has taken her not only to the Himalaya but also to remote places in Africa and Alaska.
“Expedition medicine is a specialty in and of itself. Few doctors have the skills and background to be a good expedition doctor without a pretty substantial investment in self-learning,” she says. “Unfortunately, many just try to wing it.”
Freer was also struck by what she perceived as a discrepancy between the care some doctors were providing the paying clients versus the local staff—in many cases making the Nepalese walk (or be carried) down to the HRA’s clinic at Periche or, for more serious cases, the Sir Edmund Hillary Foundation’s hospital located in Kunde, an additional day away. “I saw a way to continue using the mission of the HRA by treating Westerners and using the fees to subsidize care for the Sherpa,” explains Freer.
Each spring for the past nine years Freer has made the ten-day trek up to Everest Base Camp, often staying for the entire two-and-a-half-month season, and walking with her is like traveling through a well-loved local’s neighborhood, not someone who is halfway around the world from home. At each teahouse and frequently along the trail, Sherpa—grateful patients or friends and relatives of patients from years past—quietly approach Freer with a soft “Lulu Didi.” (Didi is the customary term for “older sister.”)
“It makes me squirm when people call this work, what I do—‘selfless,’” says Freer. “What I do feels very selfish, because I get back so much more than I give. It turns out that’s the magic of it all.”
Freer and the rest of the Everest ER doctors have been in camp for less than 48 hours and already they have dealt with a deceased body from a few seasons past, inadvertently unearthed in the moraine by Sherpa constructing camps, and have seen close to a dozen patients in their bright yellow dining tent as they wait for the clinic’s Weatherport structure to be erected. One Sherpa complains of back pain after a week’s worth of moving 100-plus pound boulders—part of preparing flat tent platforms for incoming clients. Another man can hardly walk because of a collection of boils festering in a sensitive region. A Rai cook who has worked at Everest Base Camp for multiple seasons is experiencing extreme fatigue and a cough, which the doctors diagnose as the onset of High Altitude Pulmonary Edema.
With the exception of the cook, who must descend, all the patients are able to remain at base camp, with follow-up visits scheduled for subsequent days. Each man I ask explains that without Everest ER’s help, they would either have to wait for their expedition to arrive with the hopes that their team leader would be able to treat them, or descend to see a doctor. The ability to stay at Everest Base Camp is not only logistically easier but also means the men do not risk losing their daily wage or, in the case of some lower-tier companies, their job.
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Comments (4)
I met Molly, Dr. Freer and several other doctors traveling with her to basecamp earlier this year while I was trekking in the Khumbu region. I was amazed by the endeavor and impressed by the high regard in which Dr. Freer is held. She seemed rather modest about her accomplishments which Molly has done a fine job of representing in this article. The Sherpa people seem to be quietly conflicted with the business of climbing expeditions/trekking and their traditional culture as well as the "expedition ethic". While the basecamp ER is a piece of "infrastructure" that can diminish the traditional sense of an expedition ethic, it only exists during the climbing season when the teahouses and other support infrastructure are flourishing. Guides may be justified in their thoughts but should realize that much self-reliance goes out the window when a climber signs on with an expedition team that often includes some medical expertise, hires a guide and sherpas, stays at teahouses, crosses new steel suspension bridges and stays in a basecamp prepared by others before they arrive. Many visitors in the region are trekkers, never going above basecamp, if that far; and these trips are not expeditions, but support the local economy and are often in need of medical help.
Bemoaning the ER, which makes available more expertise, good equipment, and better conditions for medical purposes,is a bit like bemoaning the onset of gortex and down clothing, and better equipment in general. I think every sherpa I met there has a cell phone, and its not just in medical emergencies when cell phones are used. As for American self-reliance, sadly, for most,I think that horse left the barn long ago. More infrastructure, more demand, more expeditions, more money, more infrastructure; and for a culturally rich, financially poor region, therein lies the rub. The test for the expedition ethic has just moved uphill, it now begins at basecamp instead of Lukla.
Posted by Bruce Rogers on August 1,2011 | 07:25 PM
Nice article. Infact it made me visualize the situation there..!!!!
Posted by Sushil Pant on June 28,2011 | 12:22 PM
Westerners seem to think that Nepalis are immune to altitude sickness. This article clearly illustrates that is not true even though anthropologists believe Tibetans have physically adapted to higher altitudes. Beyond the Summit gives an intimate look into the lives of Sherpas.
Posted by Linda LeBlanc on June 15,2011 | 11:29 PM
This is a really interesting story and nicely written too. Dr. Freer is pretty amazing.
Posted by Leah on June 10,2011 | 01:53 PM