The patient exam is the intervention. Miss something early and you're playing catch-up for the rest of the evacuation. Wilderness medicine training built for Alaska.
Time is a resource — just like bandages, splints, or a litter. You can run out of it. And in wilderness medicine, the way you run out of it fastest is a rushed or incomplete patient assessment.
Miss something in the first ten minutes and you spend the next six hours playing catch-up. The patient exam isn't a formality you do before treatment starts — it is the treatment. Getting it right, fast, under pressure, is the whole job.
Alaska makes that harder. Long evacuation times, no cell service, extreme conditions. But the core problem is the same anywhere: you need a reliable system that works when you're stressed, cold, and the stakes are real.
"Time is a resource. The patient exam is the intervention. Miss something early and you're playing catch-up."— Jacob Shultz, Paramedic / Wilderness EMT
3% of every ABM tuition goes directly to an Alaska SAR unit, EMS organization, or outdoor youth program of your choice — or into the Belay On scholarship fund to help train someone who can't afford it. You choose at registration.