SOCIETY
Kilimanjaro climbers ‘take health risks’
Baku, October 18 (AZERTAC). Climbers scaling Mount Kilimanjaro are taking unnecessary risks with their health, experts have warned, according to BBC News.
Travel firms have seen an increase in bookings following the successful summit by nine celebrities for last year`s Comic Relief campaign.
But Edinburgh University scientists warned many climbing Africa`s tallest peak “know little or nothing” about high altitude, which can be fatal.
Scientists camped out to test altitude sickness in more than 200 climbers.
The researchers camped for three weeks on the mountain at a height of 4,730m - not far below the 5,895m summit.
They assessed climbers using the Lake Louise consensus scoring system, which records symptoms such as headache, sickness and fatigue.
The academics found almost half, or 47%, of those who had climbed Kilimanjaro, were suffering from altitude sickness before they reached the summit and most were ascending too high, too quickly.
Signs of sickness include vomiting, headaches, difficulty sleeping and sometimes problems with co-ordination.
Effects can be felt from as low as 2,500m above sea level and 75% of people will have mild symptoms at 3,000m or higher, the study said.
Researchers said the best way to acclimatize was to climb slowly and some trekkers incorporate acclimatization rest days.
Some also opt for anti-sickness drugs, although there is controversy in the mountaineering community about whether they are effective.
However, the experts found that neither altitude-sickness drugs nor rest days had a major effect on whether people got ill.