1. Mountaineering fatalities on Aconcagua: 2001-2012.
- Author
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Westensee J, Rogé I, Van Roo JD, Pesce C, Batzli S, Courtney DM, and Lazio MP
- Subjects
- Adult, Alaska epidemiology, Altitude Sickness complications, Altitude Sickness epidemiology, Argentina epidemiology, Brain Edema mortality, Death, Sudden, Cardiac epidemiology, Female, Humans, Hypothermia mortality, Male, Mountaineering injuries, Nepal epidemiology, Pulmonary Edema mortality, Retrospective Studies, Washington epidemiology, Altitude, Mortality, Mountaineering statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
High altitude mountaineering is a dangerous endeavor due to the hypoxic hypobaric environment, extreme weather, and technical skills required. One of the seven summits, Aconcagua (6962 m) is the highest mountain outside of Asia. Its most popular route is nontechnical, attracting >3000 mountaineers annually. Utilizing data from the Servicio Médico Aconcagua (park medical service), we performed a retrospective descriptive analysis with the primary objective of deriving a fatality rate on Aconcagua from 2001 to 2012. The fatality rate on Aconcagua was then compared to other popular mountains. For climbers who died, we report all available demographic data, mechanisms of death, and circumstances surrounding the death. Between 2001 and 2012, 42,731 mountaineers attempted to summit Aconcagua. There were 33 fatalities. The fatality rate was 0.77 per 1000, or 0.077%. The fatality rate on Aconcagua is lower than that on Everest or Denali but higher than that on Rainier.
- Published
- 2013
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