Patient Rescued From Antarctic Research Station

An Australian medical team has arrived in Christchurch, New Zealand, after departing the U.S. McMurdo Station in Antarctica where it rescued a U.S. expedition member who suffered a medical emergency.

The patient, who for privacy issues has not been identified, landed this morning in New Zealand. The patient was to be transported to a local hospital there, according to a spokesman from the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF).

The Australian Antarctic Division was asked to assist in the rescue and provided its A319 Airbus and a medical team to help, the Australian government division said in a statement.

The rescue team had been waiting for a break in the weather to make the risky trip to the Antarctica research station. The team's plane left Christchurch Wednesday evening en route to McMurdo Station, according to the Australian Antarctic Division.

The NSF coordinated the operation, but remained mum on most of the details.

NSF spokeswoman Debbie Wing told ABC News that privacy issues prevent the foundation from revealing the patient's name, gender, age or illness.

"The patient's condition may require treatment beyond what can be provided at the station's medical facility," the NSF said in statement Wednesday.

The NSF said the patient is in stable condition, but the McMurdo medical facility is "equivalent to an urgent-care center in the U.S., and is not equipped for the type of procedure being contemplated."

Wing could not confirm that the patient is American, but said she assumes that he or she is American.

The Australian team was positioned in Christchurch and had been waiting for weather and lighting conditions to allow them to make the dangerous trip to the bottom of the world.

Antarctica is in the middle of its six-month winter. It is now dark at McMurdo except for a brief period of twilight at midday, making the flight risky.

A live webcam positioned at McMurdo showed that it was 30 degrees below zero Wednesday. McMurdo is about 2,415 miles south of Christchurch and about 850 miles from the South Pole.

"All nations work together very cooperatively in these sorts of emergency situations in Antarctica to provide support when and as required," Australian Antarctic Division Director Dr. Tony Fleming said in a statement.

This risky rescue was not the first of its kind.

In October 2011, American researcher Renee-Nicole Douceur suffered from a suspected stroke and was rescued from the pole by the U.S. Air Force. And in two separate incidents in 2010, New Zealand helped two Americans get out of McMurdo due to illnesses.

Douceur described the weather conditions that can hinder such a rescue operation.

"As the sun starts rising the weather can start to act up a bit and become very stormy. Weather like anywhere can be very fickle, it can change in a moment's notice," she said.

The most famous rescue was of Dr. Jerri Nielsen in 1999. Nielsen, the doctor at Amundsen-Scott South Pole Research Station, diagnosed herself as having breast cancer after she found a lump. She treated herself with chemotherapy agents delivered by parachute from the U.S. Air Force until she was rescued. She even performed her own biopsy procedure.

After her rescue, she was treated and her cancer went into remission, but it returned in 2005. Nielsen died in 2009 at the age of 57.

ABC News' Joseph Simonetti contributed to this report

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97 comments

  • Punk Rock and Minerals  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  3 days ago
    I am never going to Antarctica
    • Bob 2 days 22 hours ago
      You can take a nice cruise ship there in their summer, December- January.
  • WV_DallasFan  •  3 days ago
    Thanks Aussies / Kiwis
  • Charles  •  3 days ago
    When I was in Anchorage Alaska one time it got below zero for like a week or so. At about 2 below we still put on bacalavas and ran 3 miles in the snow. This is really severly cold weather, but possible to work in. I just would not want to camp outside in that weather without some kind of a shelter.
    • Ancak 3 days ago
      You should have been here this past winter , 11 feet of snow , 20 below zero for 6 weeks , gotta love it !
  • Chaz  •  Syracuse, Utah  •  3 days ago
    Things have changed... It use to be that only the USAF could fly in and out during the winter. If an Airbus can then I'm surprised its called a big deal any more.
    I hope the person is able to recover and get home safely.
  • Jim Rome  •  3 days ago
    That's where all the aliens are hidden
  • Monkey Doo  •  3 days ago
    I did my year in the Arctic. USAF radar site. Close enough.
  • integrator  •  3 days ago
    I remember when you didn't get rescued in Antarctica. You wintered over, you really wintered over. Live or die, you were there for the duration.
  • cynthia  •  Orlando, Florida  •  3 days ago
    while we sweat our #$%$ off here in florida it looks nice and cool down there!
    • Tye 3 days ago
      I bet they're thinking Florida sounds nice right now lol.
  • mott k  •  Norwich, New York  •  3 days ago
    I remember the call to McMurdo in the film the THING with Kurt Russell . Come in Mc Murdo
  • Moi  •  3 days ago
    One more censored US only video...
  • t.m.  •  3 days ago
    As a person who goes down to McMurdo Station, Antarctica every year for that last five, the medical exam are tough. Antarctica is a harsh continent, it is the highest, driest, windiest, coldest most isolated place on the planet. We know when we deploy that if something happens and we need medical attention beyond the scope of the local medical team , help is a five and a half hour plane ride north to New Zealand. and if you are in a deep field camp during the summer season, (Sept- Feb) real help is even futher away. I can promise you this, that person who had to be evaced out of there will want to return in the future because once the "ice" get in your blood it is always there. :)
    • Bob 2 days 22 hours ago
      T.M right on ! Been there to MCM and NZSP and I look forward to returning. The media hypes it up way too much! It is colder in Siberia and Alaska during the winter and 737 fly regularly there. WinFly flights to MCM in 10 days... I'll take -15f any day after a w/o at Pole.
    • t.m. 3 days ago
      @MR Sorry we all do not live in a white bread world where our big thought and danger of the day is the Wal-mart parking lot. :( "seeking adventure is the soul of man's existance"
    • MR 3 days ago
      If you chose to go some place so hostile and you get hurt I think tuff sh@# you know the risk. Dumb
  • TooMuchCouscous  •  3 days ago
    R J McReady would get her out...
  • Stephanie Longus  •  3 days ago
    I remember the Neilsen case... I didn't know she had passed. :-(
  • Pam  •  Muncy, Pennsylvania  •  3 days ago
    We are human beings and unfortunately that is why our physical condition can change at any moment. Hopefully they will recover.
    • Michael 3 days ago
      You come up with all by your self, Einstein?
  • Meg  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 days ago
    Macgyver would have had that rescue done in half the time using nothing but a shoestring and a paper clip!
  • K3Citizen  •  3 days ago
    That's sure is one expensive trip to the emergency room.
  • Jose T  •  3 days ago
    area 51 what a joke. it's all at the south pole;)
  • Lippy  •  3 days ago
    I hope they put a small sample of his blood in a Petri dish and then poked it with a heated piece of metal to test the reaction. Just to be sure.
  • Scootter  •  3 days ago
    I hope they had good health insurance. My policy does not include transportation to the hospital.
  • Big John  •  3 days ago
    I hope they have Obama-Care. That trip is going to cost somebody a lot of money.