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Snow Burial Study: How Science Uses Face-Down Volunteers

Snow Burial Study: How Science Uses Face-Down Volunteers
Aimee Cunningham 2025-11-03 ⁤15:30:00

When a person is trapped in an‌ avalanche, there is very little time before their oxygen supply runs out. A new safety device that channels ​air to the buried person’s face may extend survival and increase the chance of a successful rescue, a⁢ clinical trial suggests.

Participants were buried face-down under‍ at least 50 centimeters — about ⁢a foot and a half — of​ snow at a⁢ field site in northern Italy.The goal was to remain there safely for 35 minutes. No one in the group wearing a functioning safety device needed to be removed early due to low blood oxygen levels, researchers report October 8 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Minutes after an avalanche burial,‍ blood levels of oxygen begin to drop and those of carbon dioxide climb.​ The⁤ chance of survival⁤ decreases starting at‍ 10 minutes. Around two-thirds of people whose head and chest are trapped under snow will die of insufficient oxygen within 35 ⁢minutes. The safety device, integrated into⁤ a backpack, has​ a fan that draws air from the surrounding snow and directs it to the face from outlets in the shoulder ⁣straps.Called the Safeback SBX,the battery-operated device weighs a little‌ over 500 grams,or about a pound.

In the trial, researchers monitored participants’⁢ oxygen levels, ⁢heart and respiratory rates and othre health measures during burial, wich‌ ended if anyone’s blood oxygen ‌level became dangerously​ low, below 80 percent.​ This did not happen for the 12 people⁢ in the ‌safety device group. Eleven remained buried for ⁢the full ⁤35 minutes, ‍while one asked to be removed early due to unexpected skin irritation.

In contrast, seven of the 12 using a sham device had to stop prematurely because they fell⁢ below the blood oxygen cutoff. Another four requested an early end: Three felt short of breath and one ⁣had a panic attack. The length of time the sham device group remained buried‌ largely ⁤ranged from⁢ five to 13 minutes. Only‌ one person in ⁤that group stayed under the snow for the full 35 minutes.

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Avalanches kill an ⁢average of 100 people in Europe ​each year,⁢ including skiers and mountain climbers. Avalanche deaths ‍in the last several years in the‍ United States have ranged from roughly one dozen​ to several dozen.

Aimee Cunningham is the⁤ biomedical ⁤writer. She has a master’s degree in science journalism‍ from New York University.

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