Haven't tuned into this thread for awhile, and glad its brought up wilderness medicine. Among my numerous jobs, I am an instructor with Wilderness Medical Associates (
www.wildmed.com), with WMI we are the other big company in the wilderness medicine business. WMI runs fabulous classes I am certainly partial to our offerings, but I am biased. Our company has in the last few years created courses geared for particular persuits, we have had great success with a travel medicine course for tourists, and an offshore emergency medicine course for offshore sailors.
Anyway, I teach all sorts of WMA wilderness medicine courses all over the world, and I am currently working on a 2 day course specifically for pilots, and particularly backcountry pilots. I have a background as a canoe guide in Northern Canada, 13 years as a ski patroller for Purgatory in Colorado, a medic with our local fire department, vice president of our local SAR team, and an 800 hour skywagon pilot. The course would be 16 hours in length, include classroom and field sessions, and would cover the level of a Wilderness First Aid certification but with subjects specifically useful to pilots. You would also get a card with the name we decide for the cert., I am partial to "Backcountry Aviation Medicine" or BAM, not copyrighted yet, don't steal!
The course I have in mind would include subjects that would help pilots:
-Basics of Physiology and how the body reacts to injury or illness.
-Determining when you have a medical emergency and when you can treat the patient in the field.
-Assesment and treatment of traumatic injuries, including fractures, concussions, spinal assesment, etc.
-Risk Assesment as it pertains to calling for or assisting in a remote rescue.
-Building an appropriate first aid kit and equipment that may help you get rescued.
-Over the counter and prescription drugs that might be handy in a med kit.
-Aeromedicine- how altitude and flight affect your body and brain.
Our courses are all heavily scenario based and I envision practicing techniques for removing and treating patients from an incident with an airplane.
What do you guys think? Anyone interested? Let me know and I'll keep you posted on my progress.
Brad