Altitude sickness is the greatest health risk on Kilimanjaro, and responsible operators invest heavily in equipment and protocols to detect and manage altitude-related problems. While most climbers reach the summit without incident, the safety systems behind the scenes are what make that possible.
Safety Equipment Overview
Supplemental Oxygen
Emergency-only use for severe altitude sickness. Stabilizes climbers during evacuation.
Gamow Bag
Portable hyperbaric chamber simulating descent by 1,500โ2,000 metres. Life-saving equipment.
Pulse Oximeter
Daily blood oxygen monitoring. Detects altitude sickness before symptoms appear.
Supplemental Oxygen
Unlike Everest, supplemental oxygen is not routinely used on Kilimanjaro. It is carried as an emergency safety measure for specific situations:
- Severe altitude sickness: HACE or HAPE symptoms โ oxygen administered immediately during evacuation
- Critically low SpO2: Below 60โ65% with symptoms โ stabilizes during evacuation
- Emergency overnight use: When descent is impossible due to darkness or weather
Important: Supplemental oxygen treats symptoms, not the cause. The only definitive treatment for altitude sickness is descent. Oxygen is a bridge โ it keeps the climber stable while guides organize immediate descent.
Gamow Bags: Portable Hyperbaric Chambers
A Gamow bag is a lightweight, inflatable chamber roughly 2m long and 1m in diameter. The climber is placed inside and pressurized using a hand pump, simulating descent by 1,500โ2,000 metres.
Inside a pressurized Gamow bag at 4,700m, a climber experiences conditions equivalent to approximately 3,200m โ where altitude sickness symptoms typically improve rapidly.
How Gamow Bags Are Used
- Climber moved into the bag and opening sealed
- Guides manually pump to maintain pressure
- Climber remains inside for 1โ2 hours
- Symptoms reassessed โ improvement usually within 30โ60 minutes
- Once stabilized, descent begins immediately
Gamow bags weigh approximately 6โ7 kg and require a dedicated porter. Bush Lion Tours carries Gamow bags on all expeditions as standard.
Pulse Oximetry: Daily Monitoring
Pulse oximeters measure blood oxygen saturation (SpO2) and heart rate, providing guides with objective data about acclimatization.
What the Numbers Mean
| SpO2 Reading | Altitude Context | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| 90โ100% | Normal at any altitude | No action โ acclimatizing well |
| 80โ89% | Normal at high camps | Monitor closely โ continue with caution |
| 70โ79% | Concerning at any altitude | Rest day, monitor, consider descent |
| Below 70% | Critical โ immediate concern | Immediate descent, Gamow bag, oxygen |
Guides take readings twice daily โ morning after waking and evening before sleep. A gradual decline is normal; sudden drops or consistently low readings indicate problems.
How Guides Assess Altitude Sickness
Beyond technology, guides rely on the Lake Louise Acute Mountain Sickness Score:
- Headache (none to severe)
- Gastrointestinal symptoms (nausea, vomiting)
- Fatigue and weakness
- Dizziness and lightheadedness
- Sleep quality (disturbed sleep is early warning)
A score of 3+ confirms altitude sickness. Guides also observe behavioral changes โ unusual quietness, irritability, or difficulty with simple tasks.
Emergency Evacuation
Walking Descent
Preferred method. Climber descends with guide assistance. Fastest way to reach lower altitude.
Stretcher Evacuation
For climbers who cannot walk. Porters carry stretcher down. Slow but often the only option on remote sections.
Horse Evacuation
Available on some lower sections, particularly Marangu route. More common on approach trails.
Helicopter Evacuation
Last resort only. Weather and altitude make helicopter rescue unreliable and expensive ($3,000โ$5,000+).
What Responsible Operators Carry
- Pulse oximeters for daily health monitoring
- Supplemental oxygen cylinders with masks
- At least one Gamow bag per group
- Comprehensive first aid kit with altitude medications (Diamox, dexamethasone, nifedipine)
- Satellite phones or two-way radios
- Emergency stretcher access
- Documentation for each climber's health readings
Prevention: The Best Safety System
The most effective altitude safety system is prevention. The golden rules:
- Climb high, sleep low
- Ascend no more than 300โ500m per sleeping altitude above 3,000m
- Take rest days every 1,000m of elevation gain
- Drink 3โ4 litres of water per day
- Maintain a slow, steady pace
- Eat regularly even when appetite is reduced
- Report any symptoms immediately
Frequently Asked Questions
Climb with Confidence
Every Bush Lion Tours expedition includes full safety equipment and experienced guides trained in high-altitude medicine.