What do you do when you’re deep in the tropics, it’s 38°C, and your patient has a fever—but you’re hours from the nearest lab or hospital?
In this session from the World Extreme Medicine Conference, Laura McArthur shares her field-tested approach to diagnosing and managing febrile patients in remote tropical environments. Drawing from her background in general practice, obstetrics and gynaecology, orthopaedics, and expedition medicine, she offers a grounded and flexible strategy that balances clinical logic with real-world constraints.
This is not a list of textbook differentials—it’s a practical, scenario-led guide to:
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Building an effective approach when you don’t have the full clinical picture
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Recognising red flags in tropical environments
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Avoiding tunnel vision in symptom-heavy presentations
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Applying structured decision-making when diagnostics are minimal
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Lessons from remote mountain, ocean, and jungle expeditions