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Get Backup | Outside Magazine recommends Global Rescue in 2013 Travel Awards

We are excited to announce that for the second year running Global Rescue has been singled out in the Outside Magazine 2013 Travel Awards.

We are excited to announce that for the second year running Global Rescue has been singled out in the Outside Magazine 2013 Travel Awards.

To select this year’s awards, Outside tapped their global network of correspondents, who spent months on the road traveling from the Philippines to Switzerland to Namibia and then some.

Under the title ‘Get Backup’, Outside advised:

“If you’re going somewhere risky, consider Global Rescue, which offers evacuations services for members of its international medical and security coverage (from $119 per trip; globalrescue.com) Better yet, the company now offers members safety updates on every country – making it a better source of information than the State Department’s travel warnings, which can be six months old.”

Outside magazine has long been one of the world’s most trusted advisors for active and adventurous travelers,” says Outside Editor Christopher Keyes. “In addition to truly award-worthy destinations and travel providers, this year we unearthed a handful of amazing new frontiers in active travel. Our annual edit franchise honors the year’s best trips, hotels, lodges, luggage, islands, and new destinations that will be an invaluable travel resource for years to come.” 

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Outside Magazine – Get Backup | Outside Magazine recommends Global Rescue in 2013 Travel Awards

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Injured Global Rescue members evacuated after plane crash in Myanmar

Emergencies can happen at any time, and Christmas Day is no exception. Global Rescue was ready to respond when two of our members found themselves caught in a life threatening incident while on vacation in…

Emergencies can happen at any time, and Christmas Day is no exception. Global Rescue was ready to respond when two of our members found themselves caught in a life threatening incident while on vacation in Myanmar. Our Operations Team was notified that a plane had crashed just short of the runway at Heho airport, near the tourist destination of Inle Lake, and that there were multiple casualties, amongst them a husband and wife who were Global Rescue members. Global Rescue personnel immediately began putting the wheels in motion for the required evacuation to suitable medical care.

While the wife sustained a minor spinal injury, her husband suffered burns covering nearly 40% of his body—including his head, face, neck, hands, and feet—that required urgent attention. An IV was administered at a small, local hospital where other injured passengers from the crash were treated. It was clear though that this facility lacked the resources to appropriately treat this patient’s serious injuries. Global Rescue coordinated the launch of an aircraft to retrieve both members from the remote hospital, and to transport them to Bangkok, Thailand. Upon landing, they were met by an ambulance stationed on the tarmac and taken directly to one of the country’s leading hospitals. Here, they were met by a Global Rescue paramedic, deployed from our Bangkok Operations Center to oversee his care.  Their admittance had been pre-arranged and emergency care physicians were standing by, ready to receive them into the hospital’s Intensive Care Unit. After initial stabilization and having consulted with our specialists at Johns Hopkins Medicine; it was determined  that a transfer the best burn center in Singapore would be the next step in his fight for survival. The transfer was completed by private ICU aircraft and a seamless admission to the hospital was completed.

Understanding the complications beyond the immediate physical toll of such a trauma, our experienced Operations Specialists also attended to the finer but often overlooked details of their situation; replacing the wife’s prescription glasses that had been destroyed in the crash, relocating the wedding ring that had been cut off during initial treatment, bringing western-style food to the hospital for a comforting taste of home, reaching out to notify the couple’s daughter of any updates, and arranging a psychologist to work bedside with the couple to provide counseling after this traumatic event.

Within two weeks of the crash, after overseeing several skin graft surgeries, Global Rescue transported the husband by air ambulance back to his home country hospital in New York City. His wife, fitted with an orthopedic back brace, was met in New York by a member of Global Rescue’s operations team, and transported to her husband’s bedside. The couple continues to recover.

 

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Global Rescue partners with the American Birding Association (ABA)

Global Rescue is pleased to announce a new partnership with the American Birding Association.

Global Rescue is pleased to announce a new partnership with the American Birding Association.  As the ‘Official Emergency Medical and Evacuation Provider’ of the ABA, Global Rescue will offer the organization’s members and the birding community a choice of memberships, which include advisory, field rescue and evacuation services, in both medical and security emergencies.

We are proud to offer our members the services of Global Rescue,” said Jeff Gordon, ABA President.

We identified Global Rescue as the most capable company to provide the birding community with the protection they need in the event of a medical or security emergency. Fortunately, serious incidents are rare, but getting injured or becoming ill in many of the locations to which birders travel can be both a serious and costly matter. Global Rescue’s unique ability to conduct a field rescue and to evacuate a member to their home hospital, make them an obvious choice. I highly recommend that any ABA member or birder who travels consider their services, which are remarkably affordable.”

Global Rescue has a long track-record of providing emergency services to  difficult locations.  The company recently evacuated Jim Klug, Chairman of the American Fly Fishing Trade Association, from a remote river camp in Bolivia. Click here to read the whole story. Memberships start at $119.

About ABA

The ABA is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization that provides leadership to birders by increasing their knowledge, skills, and enjoyment of birding. They are the only organization in North America that specifically caters to recreational birders. They also contribute to bird and bird habitat conservation through our varied programs. The ABA’s education programs promote birding skills, ornithological knowledge, and the development of a conservation ethic. The ABA encourages birders to apply their skills to help conserve birds and their habitats, and they represent the interests of birders in planning and legislative arenas.

About Global Rescue

Global Rescue is a worldwide provider of integrated medical, security, intelligence and crisis response services to corporations, governments and individuals. Founded in partnership with Johns Hopkins Medicine, Global Rescue’s unique operational model provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to potential threats. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to clients during every globally significant crisis of the last decade. Memberships start at $119 and entitle members to rescue and transport services to their home hospital of choice.

For more information, call +1-617-459-4200

 

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Global Rescue provides life saving care after member suffers serious cardiac event in the Middle…

Dr. John Schmeelk, a university teacher, suffered a life threatening cardiac condition while living in Qatar. Global Rescue medical teams were soon on the ground, overseeing his initial treatment and orchestrating his subsequent evacuation by…

Dr. John Schmeelk, a university teacher, suffered a life threatening cardiac condition while living in Qatar. Global Rescue medical teams were soon on the ground, overseeing his initial treatment and orchestrating his subsequent evacuation by air ambulance to Israel for a life saving procedure.

In his letter Dr. Schmeelk recounts his experience and explains how Global Rescue provided so much more than evacuation services:

January 21, 2013

Dear Global Rescue:

Now that I am safely back in the United States and on my way to recovery, I want everyone at Global Rescue to know how very grateful my wife, Jean, and I are for the wonderful, literally life-saving care that you provided not only for me but for her as well.

During the early hours of Friday, March 16, I was admitted into Qatar’s national hospital’s state-of-the-art heart pavilion that had just opened in October 2011. My defibrillator/pacemaker had shocked me twice in two days, and this was just the beginning of increasingly more shocks as my arrhythmia worsened. Very soon after my Human Resources Director put Global Rescue on alert that I might need to be evacuated to the US, Jean and I met David, a Global Rescue Medical Specialist, at my hospital bedside. He immediately began inquiring of the nurses and doctors about the details of my condition and my medications, and he began instructing Jean about taking carefully detailed notes, asking questions, and getting names of everyone who gave us information. He also encouraged her to go home and rest while he stayed with me. We had thought of Global Rescue as an evacuation service, but we were to learn that they are so much more.

On March 23, before I was stable enough to be evacuated, David was recalled to the US to handle another case. His replacement, a paramedic named Andrew, arrived on March 26 and continued the same extensive and informative care that David had performed. He monitored nurses’ care, explained what they were doing, occasionally assisted me himself, and asked both the nurses and my doctors questions that Jean and I did not know to ask. When we realized that I needed a heart ablation that the hospital could not perform if faulty nodes existed inside the heart tissue, Global Rescue immediately began contacting nearby hospitals trying to locate one that would be able to give the degree of care I needed. (I could not be directly evacuated to the US because I was not stable enough to endure the long commercial flight, and the medivac plane required refueling every three hours, making a long, trans-Atlantic flight even longer and more difficult.)

Once an appropriate hospital was located in Tel Aviv, Israel, Global Rescue arranged the medivac aircraft and doctor that would take me there, and they booked a commercial flight for Jean. When complications delayed our leaving the airport, Global Rescue in Boston stayed in touch with Jean via cell phone during her layover and arranged a hotel room for her to spend the night so she could arrive at the hospital about the same time that I did. Once on our way, Andrew accompanied me in the medivac closely monitoring my condition along with the evacuation doctor during the entire flight. The next day, he would leave me briefly to meet Jean when she arrived at the Tel Aviv airport. I learned later that Global Rescue’s “point man” on the ground in Tel Aviv arranged for a gentleman from the Israeli State Department to meet Jean at the door of the airplane when she landed and to escort her through Passport Control, ensuring that she moved quickly through the process and forestalling any language problems. This is but one example of the multitude of ways in which he proactively cared for both of us during the month of April while we were in Tel Aviv. In addition, he arranged resort accommodations for Jean within walking distance of the hospital at a greatly reduced rate, gave her several brief tours of the city, frequently talked with my doctors and relayed their information to Jean and me, to name just a few of his many ways of caring for us.

One of the most touching acts performed by Global Rescue was personally escorting Jean to Jerusalem to the Wailing Wall so she could post a prayer for my recovery before my first ablation. Such thoughtfulness and care were far beyond the call of duty, but very deeply appreciated by both of us.

We remained in Global Rescue’s care about six weeks, until they were able to deliver us personally to my cardiologist’s office in New York and hear that both my cardiologist and the ICD team were satisfied with my condition.

This past holiday season, my wife and I were able to celebrate more joyfully than ever before this year because we both know that these were  holidays I might very well not have lived to see. We send our deepest thanks to each of you—and we know there were many more “behind the scenes” whom we did not meet—at Global Rescue who participated in my evacuation.

With deepest respect and gratitude,

Dr. John Schmeelk

 

 

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Global Rescue partners with the International Game Fish Association (IGFA)

Global Rescue is pleased to announce a new partnership with the International Game Fish Association, a non-profit organization committed to the conservation of game fish and the promotion of responsible and ethical angling practices.

Global Rescue is pleased to announce a new partnership with the International Game Fish Association, a non-profit organization committed to the conservation of game fish and the promotion of responsible and ethical angling practices. As the ‘Official Emergency Medical and Evacuation Provider’ of IGFA, Global Rescue will offer the organization’s members and their families a choice of memberships, which include advisory, field rescue and evacuation services, in both medical and security emergencies.

“We are proud to have chosen Global Rescue as the ‘Official Emergency Medical and Evacuation Provider’ of the IGFA and its members,” said Mike Myatt, IGFA Chief Operating Officer.

“We identified Global Rescue as the most capable company to provide our clients with the protection they need in the event of a medical or security emergency. Fortunately, serious incidents are rare, but getting injured or becoming ill in many of the locations to which IGFA members travel can be both a serious and costly matter. Global Rescue’s unique ability to conduct a field rescue and to evacuate a member to their home hospital, make them an obvious choice. I highly recommend that IGFA Members consider their services, which are remarkably affordable.”  

Global Rescue has a long track-record of providing emergency services to anglers and recently evacuated Jim Klug, AFFTA Chairman and owner of Yellow Dog Fly Fishing Adventures, from Tsimane Lodge, Bolivia.  Click here to read the whole story. Memberships start at $119.

About IGFA

Founded in 1939, the International Game Fish Association is the authority on sport fishing worldwide. The IGFA is committed to the conservation of game fish and the promotion of responsible, ethical angling practices through science, education, rule-making and record keeping. With members in nearly 120 countries and territories, the not-for-profit association’s headquarters are in the 60,000 sq ft IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame & Museum in Dania Beach, Florida. Learn more at www.igfa.org

 

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The U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association writes to thank Global Rescue

    Global Rescue is the official provider of aeromedical services to the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Team.  

 

 

Global Rescue is the official provider of aeromedical services to the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Team.

 

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VIDEO: Tannis Boisvert talks about her crash on Mt. Hood

Tannis Boisvert, a ski racer and Alpine Ontario Athlete, recalls her crash on Mt. Hood and subsequent road to recovery.

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A young ski racer recalls Global Rescue’s role in her recovery after her accident on…

"...As I was flying through the air, I immediately felt a horrible searing pain go through my Achilles and my whole foot. I knew right away this was bad."

Tannis Boivert recovering after her accident on Mt. Hood

During this past summer I travelled to Mt. Hood, Oregon, with the Ontario Ski Team for our summer training camp. The training was absolutely amazing, and our team was fortunate enough to have great weather for the full three weeks that we spent there. Towards the end of the camp, our coaches met up with one of the Global Rescue advisors in the area, who explained the membership benefits and how to utilize them. With a full understanding of the program, our coaches were very glad to be on board, but only hoped they wouldn’t have to use it for their athletes.

On the last day of the training camp, the snow was very soft and unstable. About five turns into my warm up run, my right foot struck a hole half way through a turn, and at full speed, my feet stopped and my body kept going. As I was flying through the air, I immediately felt a horrible searing pain go through my Achilles and my whole foot. I knew right away this was bad.  

On the toboggan ride down, I was already very nervous and upset knowing that I had injured myself. After my coach and the ski patroller carefully pulled off my ski boot, an ambulance was called and I was transported to the closest hospital in Oregon. In the first hour of being at the hospital I had 3 x-rays taken of my foot, and two different doctors analyzed the results. The whole time I was just hoping that I had just sprained my ankle, or done something minimal enough that it wouldn’t take any time away from my training. But, when the doctors notified me that I had in fact broken my Calcaneus (my heal), I was mortified. I instantly started thinking of the training I would miss and the long and painful road to recovery.

Thankfully I didn’t have enough time to think about the après injury process because within 30 minutes of knowing my injury I had a foot specialist in my hospital room telling me my options, and explaining that the best one for me was to have surgery and get a screw put through my heal.  Being 18, I could make the decision on my own, and I decided on the surgery. But before I could get surgery I had to get my insurance cleared, and not being in Canada, insurance companies needed time to get the clear, which I didn’t have. Not having any luck contacting my parent’s insurance company, my coaches contacted Global Rescue, and from that point on everything happened so quickly.

The ability of Global Rescue’s response team was amazing and words cannot explain how thankful both my coach and I were at that moment to have them helping us. Because of Global Rescue I was able to get surgery on my foot 3 hours after arriving at a foreign hospital with one of the United States top orthopedic surgeons who was at the hospital for that evening only.

If I didn’t have Global Rescue’s help and guidance I most likely wouldn’t have been able to get surgery as quickly as I did. I might have even had to fly back to Canada and wait weeks to get the surgery that I got in just hours in the States because of Global Rescue. They were not only with me during the surgery but were there for me to organize my flight home in first class. After two months of therapy, pool workouts and routine phone calls from Global Rescue to hear about my progress, I am ready to get back on the slopes and begin what I hope to be my best race season yet!

Global Rescue isn’t just there when you’re injured, but is there until your back on your feet too, and as an athlete, the peace of mind that I have knowing that they’re there for me is worth every single penny.

 

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Global Rescue’s 24/7 medical advice saves one member’s vacation in Tanzania

One of our members, Rion Causey, recounts his experience using the advisory benefits of his Global Rescue membership while traveling in Tanzania:

 

Rion and Diane Causey in the Usambara Mountains of Tanzania

While the headline stories about Global Rescue tend to describe challenging rescues from remote corners of the world, there is a less dramatic but equally important side to what we do.

Whether it is a simple stomach ache or something more serious, Global Rescue members can pick up the phone 24/7 and speak directly with our on-staff paramedics. In conjunction with our in-house physicians and specialists at Johns Hopkins Medicine, we will provide you with the timely and knowledgeable advice that can make or break your trip.

One of our members, Rion Causey, recounts his experience using the advisory benefits of his membership while traveling in Tanzania:

“I would like to compliment Global Rescue on their assistance to my wife during a recent hiking trip in the Usambara Mountains of Tanzania.  Her stomach had been getting progressively worse for two days, and now her temperature had begun to rise.  She had been taking Imodium, but with little success.  We had gotten a prescription for Cipromycin before leaving the States, but weren’t sure if the situation warranted use of such strong drugs, and how long to take it.  We used our iPad, connected to the Internet using a cellular SIM card, to contact Global Rescue and alert them to Diane’s symptoms.  They responded immediately and requested further information on specific conditions.  Within an hour of my transmission of that information, Global Rescue relayed treatment recommendations from their medical staff, which includes oversight from specialists at Johns Hopkins Medicine.  Taking the Cipromycin immediately and watching out for dehydration resulted in her temperature breaking within twenty four hours.  We were able to return to Arusha, and start our planned safari.  Having an emergency evacuation membership from a company that provides more than just evacuations saved our vacation.”

Rion Causey

 

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Jim Klug recalls his evacuation from the Bolivian jungle after freak eye injury

Member Jim Klug, AFFTA chairman and founder of Yellow Dog Flyfishing Adventures, recounts his freak eye injury and subsequent evacuation from deep in the Bolivian jungle:

Jim Klug, AFFTA chairman and founder of Yellow Dog Flyfishing Adventures, recounts his freak eye injury and subsequent evacuation from deep in the Bolivian jungle:

As someone who literally travels the globe for a living, I am more than aware that accidents can happen and problems can occur at any time and in any place. That said, I have always been of the mindset that accidents are things that happen to OTHER people, and that as long as I was careful and stayed “situationally aware” at all times, I could avoid problems and serious accidents. Recently, however, during a trip to jungles of Bolivia to photograph and fish for Golden Dorado, I received a healthy dose of reality that included a scary medical situation, a Global Rescue evac, and two days in the hospital in Miami. 

We had made the trip to Tsimane’s Asunta River Lodge on the Secure River, one of the most remote and untouched areas in all of Bolivia. This is an area that is home to spectacular Golden Dorado – one of the largest, meanest and toughest fish found anywhere in the world of freshwater fishing. On day three of the trip on the Secure River, as we headed back to the main lodge after camping some twenty miles upstream, I sustained a serious “blunt force trauma” injury to my right eye, which took out my vision entirely and left me with a serious concussion. When the accident occurred, we were still several miles upstream from the lodge, with the sun beginning to set and darkness coming on fast.

In trying to recreate the events of the accident in my mind, I realize that it was a totally random, freak accident that happened incredibly quickly.  We were moving down the river in large, 28’ dugout canoes, with a fishing guide, two anglers, and two local Indians who were “poling” the boats with long, 20’ wooden poles. As we negotiated the canoe though a fast section of whitewater,  the front boatman was attempting to push us off of an outcropping of rocks when the long wooden push pole became wedged in the rocks. Not wanting to let go of the pole and lose it, he attempted to hold on and pry it free from the rocks. What happened as the boat continued to move through the water was that the pole bent back like a loaded bow until the boatman could no longer hold on to it.  At that point, it slipped from his hands and the pole sprang back and hit me directly in the face. The blow was directly to my right eye, and I literally never saw it coming. It basically sprang back with the same force of someone swinging a heavy wooden baseball bat.  Direct hit to my eyeball and instantaneous loss of vision.

What had been a leisurely float back to the lodge quickly became a serious medical situation, and the moment I “came to” after receiving the blow, I knew that I was in trouble. I had completely lost all vision in my right eye and there we were in one of the most remote areas in the entire region. Within minutes of the accident occurring, my fishing partner was on the sat phone calling Global Rescue, who immediately kicked things in to high gear and began to help from several thousand miles away.   

Thus began a series of calls, medical consultations, and support procedures that Global Rescue handled from that point on. After stabilizing the injury and making it back to the lodge that night, Global Rescue arranged for an air evacuation early the following morning. I was back in the Bolivian city of Santa Cruz that afternoon and was immediately checked in to the hospital. From there, I was flown back to Miami the following day, where I was taken directly to Bascom Palmer Eye Institute to meet with several doctors and eye specialists. As I departed the lodge to begin my journey back to the U.S., I had both eyes bandaged and covered (they tell you to cover both so that neither eye is open and there is no “sympathetic” eye movement from one to the other”) making for a pretty unusual journey. That said, every step of the way – from the moment I was flown out of the jungle to the time I arrived home in Montana five days later – Global Rescue was there to assist. With local representatives, medical support staff, interpreters, pilots, doctors, and many others, they simply did not miss a beat.

From years of traveling to exotic areas and remote locales, I have learned that it is always good to avoid taking unnecessary chances.  I am someone who believes that you should always fish and travel smart, avoiding situation where you could be injured.  What this situation taught me, however, is that no matter how careful you are, there are some situations and accidents that you simply cannot prevent. And when an injury occurs, it can come out of nowhere, and chances are you will never see it coming.  Travel smart and be prepared. When it comes to medical evacuation and security insurance, my recommendation is to never leave home without it!

 

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Global Rescue announces partnership with Young Presidents’ Organization

Global Rescue has partnered with Young Presidents’ Organization (YPO) to offer YPO members and their families worldwide crisis response, evacuation and consultative services.

Boston, MA (October 17, 2012) —  Global Rescue has partnered with Young Presidents’ Organization (YPO) to offer YPO members and their families worldwide crisis response, evacuation and consultative services.

“We are excited to partner with YPO and to protect and provide critical services to their members wherever they may travel,” said Global Rescue Senior Director of Response Services Tiger Shaw. 

As a partner of YPO, Global Rescue will offer the organization’s members and their families a choice of memberships, which include advisory, field rescue and evacuation services.

About YPO

YPO (Young Presidents’ Organization) is a not-for-profit, global network of young chief executives connected around the shared mission of becoming Better Leaders Through Education and Idea Exchange™.  Founded in 1950, YPO today provides 20,000 peers and their families in more than 120 countries with access to unique experiences, world-class resources, alliances with top learning institutions, and specialized Networks that help them enhance their business, community and personal leadership.  Altogether, YPO member-run companies employ more than 15 million people around the world and generate US$6 trillion in annual revenues.  For more information, visitwww.ypo.org.  Also find YPO on Facebook and Twitter.

About Global Rescue

Global Rescue is a crisis response and risk management company that provides best-in-class medical, security, advisory, consultative and evacuation services for individuals, corporations, governments and NGOs worldwide.  The company’s emergency response teams are comprised of paramedics, physicians and security personnel, many of whom are veterans of elite military special operations units.  Through an exclusive relationship with Johns Hopkins Medicine, Global Rescue members benefit from the oversight of some of the world’s finest physicians.  Global Rescue utilizes medically equipped aircraft to fly members to their home hospital of their choice in the event of an illness or injury requiring hospitalization.  Global Rescue is the official provider of medical evacuation and advisory services to the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Teams, the American Alpine Club, NASA and many leading companies.  For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com/ypo

For further information, please contact Global Rescue at +1 617 459 4200