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Author Topic: Hurt in tree-stand falls.....  (Read 1469 times)

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Offline Lee Borgersen

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 :coffee: Study: For hunters hurt in tree-stand falls, most often, it’s spinal injuries.

January 28, 2018

 :Hunter: ....
 Hunter education specialist for the DNR, Brenda VonRueden, said that 84 percent of hunters use tree stands during the nine-day Wisconsin gun deer season, and 97 percent use tree stands.
MADISON, Wis. — Researchers in Wisconsin say that spinal injuries account for more than half of the injuries that occur to hunters after falling from a tree stand.

 :popcorn: ...
A review of the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics’ trauma database for tree stand-related injuries from 1999 to 2013 shows 55 percent resulted in one or more spinal injuries, Wisconsin Public Radio reported.

 :tut: ....
“Entering and exiting the tree stand is a very frequent time for people to fall because you’re in that transition period … We had a couple people who made it all the way into the tree stand and had a loss of consciousness,” said Dr. Kimberly Hamilton, who conducted the study with Dr. Nathaniel Brooks and Dr. Brandon Rocque.

The study that also found 7 out of 117 patients admitted to using alcohol :drinking: the day of their accident.

“We thankfully had very few patients in our study who had been intoxicated :tequila; prior to climbing into their tree stand. The one factor that stood out (as a potential contributing cause to the fall) was that out of 117 patients, only four reported any use of a safety harness,” said Hamilton.

The study shows that spinal injuries ranged from mild to severe. Five hunters who fell from tree stands during the 14-year period examined had injuries that resulted in paralysis. :doah:

There are no laws that require a safety harness be used in tree stands, but it’s highly recommended. A Wisconsin DNR survey shows a majority of hunters use them.

 :green archer: ...
Hunter education specialist for the DNR, Brenda VonRueden, said that 84 percent of hunters use tree stands during the nine-day Wisconsin gun deer season, and 97 percent use tree stands during the archery season.

 :thumbs: ....
“We don’t recommend using homemade stands,” VonRueden said. “We’d rather they use a stand from the Tree Stand Manufacturers Association, a ladder stand or a climbing stand. Not the old wooden stands that are (held together) by nails.”
« Last Edit: January 01/29/18, 03:17:44 AM by Lee Borgersen »
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