Medicine in the wild

By Alex Branch

Wilderness Medicine Students

 

A group of UNT Health Science Center students are helping classmates and community members learn to survive medical emergencies in the wilderness.

The Wilderness Medicine Student Interest Group has organized camping trips and free weekend workshops at the Fort Worth outdoors store Backwoods to educate the public about everything from treating heat stroke to surviving encounters with mountain lions.

“We try to teach skills for situations people might encounter in Texas on their camping or hiking trips,” said Jordan Torres, a second-year student in the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine and the organization’s president. “These are practical skills – like how to assemble a first aid kit – that people will actually use.”

Created two years ago, the student organization has already grown to 218 medical, physician assistant, physical therapy, medical sciences and pharmacy students. The organization’s officers have earned Advanced Wilderness Life Support certification, a skill level also achieved by U.S. Army and other military medical personnel.

The advanced certification course teaches students, for example, how to use large sticks to make a chair to evacuate an injured hiker, or how to turn a backpack into a temporary neck brace for someone injured in a fall, said Mary Rosegrant, a second-year TCOM student and the organization’s vice president.

Wilderness medical skills translate into career opportunities for students, who are qualified to work on disaster relief and search-and-rescue teams, or even in impoverished communities without medical resources.

“The medical base on Mount Everest consists of doctors, physician assistants and nurses with wilderness medicine skills,” Torres said. “These skills create opportunities.”

Each fall, the student organization plans a weekend camping trip, mostly recently to the Wichita Mountains in Oklahoma. The trip is not only an opportunity to learn but also to become acquainted with fellow students and relax.

“Every first-year medical student eventually hits a wall, overwhelmed by stress and information,” Torres said. “It feels great to get outdoors and breathe a little.”

Learn more

To learn about upcoming public workshops, email Jordan Torres or Mary Rosegrant.

Recent News

Mtawndy2mze
  • Our People
|Apr 18, 2024

TCOM’s Dr. Lisa Nash honored with the 2024 Special Lifetime Achievement Award by AOGME

It has been a lifetime of service to osteopathic medicine and graduate medical education for Lisa Nash, DO, MS-HPEd, FAAFP, and that remarkable career was honored by the Assembly of Osteopathic Graduate Medical Educators as she received their 2024 Special Lifetime Achievement Award as part of the Am...
Cervantes 20240117 143815
  • Our People
|Apr 17, 2024

Protecting quality of life for senior living residents through HSC’s ICARE initiative

Through HSC’s ICARE – Infection Control Advocate and Resident Education - program, Dr. Diana Cervantes and School of Public Health students are helping to protect the quality of life for residents in nursing home communities. Dr. Cervantes is an associate professor, population and community hea...
Uyen Sa Nguyen Scaled[58]
  • Our People
|Apr 12, 2024

Faculty Highlight: Dr. Uyen-Sa D. T. Nguyen

Dr. Nguyen is an associate professor, population and community health, at The University of North Texas Health Science Center’s School of Public Health. She recently received a new pilot grant and donation from an HSC Foundation donor to support her research. Here, she talks about this new funding...
Pain Registry Licciardone
  • Research
|Apr 11, 2024

JAMA Network publishes HSC study showing chronic pain favorable outcomes associated with physician empathy

JAMA Network Open this month published an article, “Physician Empathy and Chronic Pain Outcomes,” based on national data collected by the Pain Registry for Epidemiological, Clinical, and Interventional Studies and Innovation (PRECISION) at The University of North Texas Health Science Center at F...