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 3 of 3)
The ER’s locale might be glamorous, but the work is often not. Headaches, diarrhea, upper respiratory infections, anxiety and ego-related issues disguised as physical ailments are the clinic’s daily bread and butter. And although the clinic’s resources have expanded dramatically over the past nine years, there is no escaping the fact that this is a seasonal clinic housed in a canvas tent located at 17,590 feet. When serious incidents do occur, Freer and her colleagues must problem solve with a severely limited toolbox. Often the handiest implement is duct tape.
“There is no rule book that says, ‘When you’re at 18,000 feet and this happens, do x.’ Medicine freezes solid, tubing snaps in the icy winds, batteries die—nothing is predictable,” says Freer. But it’s that challenge that keeps Freer and many of her colleagues coming back. This back-to-basics paradigm also engenders a more old-fashioned doctor-patient relationship that Freer misses when practicing in the States.
“Working at Everest ER takes me back to what took me to medical school in the first place—helping people and having time to actually spend with them,” she says. “I’m just doing what I think is best for the patient—not what the insurance company will reimburse.”
While Everest ER is now a well-established part of the Everest climbing scene, there have certainly been bumps in the trail, particularly that first year in 2003. While the HRA backed the idea of the clinic, Freer had to find financial support elsewhere. Critical pieces of equipment never arrived, and one day while treating a patient, the generator malfunctioned, rendering radios and batteries needed for oxygen concentrators useless; the foot pedal to the hyperbaric chamber broke; IV fluids were freezing en route to a patient’s veins; and all the injectable medications had frozen solid. As if that weren’t enough, the floor was covered in water as the glacial ice melted from below.
There have also been mountain guides who say that although they are grateful for the care the doctors provide, they lament Everest Base Camp’s ever expanding infrastructure of which Everest ER is just another example. Everest ER lessens an expedition’s ethic of self-reliance and the all-around know-how on which the guiding profession prides itself.
But nonetheless, since Everest ER first rolled back the tent flap, the clinic has seen over 3,000 patients. Among the approximately 30 critical cases, there have been causes for celebrating as well, including marriage proposals, weddings and women who discover that their nausea and fatigue are due not to dysentery, but a long- awaited pregnancy. The spring of 2012 will mark Everest ER’s tenth anniversary.
“After nine seasons, if we have significantly impacted 30 lives, if we helped return 30 people to their families, that is an amazing bit of work. Even one makes it worth all the effort,” says Freer.
“But 30? Wow, that’s something to feel good about.”
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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