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Missions & Member TestimonialsFebruary 28, 2012
Founder and CEO of Global Rescue, Dan Richards, spends more than 100 days on the road each year. The Boston based crisis response company has a growing list of clients, ranging from individuals and their families to the employees of large corporations and government entities. The global nature of these clients means his schedule is relentless.
Here Dan talks to USA Today about how he keeps business travel safe and comfortable:
Dan Richards is a globe-trotting CEO. But he learned one of his most important tips for the road when he was a college student trekking through Tunisia.
Richards was driving bare-chested in the desert one day in 1994 when he got pulled over. Apparently the policeman disapproved of Richards driving around with no shirt and was going to arrest him. “I almost ended up in a bad spot for no other reason than being ignorant of the local customs,” says Richards, 38.
Richards apologized and avoided a trip to jail. But he learned a critical lesson. “Be aware of what the local culture is,” he says. “Do not stick out in any way. Leave your San Francisco Giants hat at home.”
Read the full story here.
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NewsFebruary 28, 2012
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Missions & Member TestimonialsDecember 13, 2011
Mark Tenerowicz was just a few weeks into his deployment to Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan when he fought what might have been the most important battle of his military career.
He was a Major in the United States Army Reserve Medical Corps, an emergency medicine physician attached to the 325th Field Hospital. He worked in an ER that handled a huge number of amputations – soldiers and civilians who had been wounded in Russian mine fields – but the case that stands out most in his mind was one called in over the phone.
A colonel stationed in remote eastern Afghanistan had suffered a heart attack and there was no sufficient facility in the area to treat him. After hearing the details of his condition, Dr. Tenerowicz recommended that he be airlifted to Bagram immediately. The major on the other end of the line, at the Tactical Operations Center,refused, saying the colonel would be taken to the nearby Salerno forward operating base because he could not spare the aircraft for the longer flight to Bagram.
Dr. Tenerowicz insisted. What followed was a standoff between the two majors.
“I told him, ‘Look, we’re the same rank,” Dr. Tenerowicz recalled. “I can’t tell you what to do with your aircraft, but I can tell you, if you take him to Salerno instead of here, he will die.”
Dr. Tenerowicz spoke to a sergeant at the TOC and pleaded with him to convince the major to spare the aircraft. He finally did. When the colonel arrived in Bagram, he looked ashen and gravely ill. Dr. Tenerowicz administered medication to break up the clots in his blood vessels and begged the transport office to take him to Europe right away.
They conceded, and the colonel went on to make a full recovery.
“That was a big win for me,” Dr. Tenerowicz said. “It was very analogous to what we do at Global Rescue. First and foremost, we’re patient advocates.
“It may be unpleasant, but I spend an awful lot of time getting people to do what is right for our clients.”
As the Associate Medical Director for Global Rescue, Dr. Tenerowicz is one of the first doctors to hear about a patient’s case from the triaging paramedic. He supervises the initial medical recommendations offered to the member, advises on cases when appropriate and directs specific cases to other physicians at Global Rescue or specialists at Johns Hopkins Medicine. At the end of the day, his job is to make sure the patient is getting the best medical care and advice available. He has been an integral part of a team that has saved many members’ lives.
Dr. Tenerowicz started off his career in the emergency room of Hartford Hospital in Connecticut, where he worked as a nurse’s assistant the summer after his junior year at Trinity College. While it wasn’t the career as a firefighter he had dreamed about after watching “Emergency!” on TV as a kid, the visits to the emergency room had him hooked on the field.
“I remember thinking, “You know what? This is a blast. I enjoyed coming to work,” he said.
The trouble was, in order to work full time as ER nurse he’d need to spend two more years on the other floors. Instead, he decided to apply to medical school, and was accepted early decision at Brown University.
After Brown, he performed his Emergency Medicine residency at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center. One huge advantage of that program for Dr. Tenerowicz is that they operated a medevac helicopter. In fact, working aboard as a flight physician is one of the requirements of the residency. If you’re not comfortable working on a helicopter, you won’t be admitted.
After a year as an observer, second-year residents are promoted to flight physician. The day that Dr. Tenerowicz entered his second year, the radio sounded at 1:30 AM with the brief instructions, “Life Flight Crew One, Code 1, general direction: south.” (Dispatchers there do not describe the case in detail, so that a pilot cannot take the nature of the emergency into consideration when deciding if the weather makes it permissible to fly.)
In this case, it was a very serious car accident. So serious, in fact, that there was very little that could have been done for the patient. His upper body was already turning a deep purple as they were loading him onto the aircraft – he had ruptured his heart when striking the steering wheel.
For the next six months, Dr. Tenerowicz said, he was scared to death the radio would go off. He revisited the case over and over in his mind, wondering if he could have done more.
After he completed his residency, he realized his dream of becoming an attending physician on an emergency room at the Jordan Hospital in Plymouth, MA, and later became its EMS Medical Director. He heard about Global Rescue from one of the paramedics he supervised there, and joined the company in 2008.
When he points to his motivation to assist travelers in need, the backdrop to the stories is often a military hospital in the Middle East, from one of his three separate deployments to Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan.
At the emergency room in Bagram, for example, he remembers a woman came in exhibiting signs of liver failure. Although Dr. Tenerowicz said the joke around the base was that he was the cardiologist, neurologist, etc. at the sparsely equipped outpost, he readily admits that none of these fields are his specialty. When he encounters a patient with serious signs such as these, he knows exactly where to refer them.
Unfortunately for the patient with the failing liver, she was a civilian – an expat who had been living there for years – and therefore ineligible to be medically evacuated by the U.S. Government. But she needed to be seen by a Western-trained cardiologist immediately. Dr. Tenerowicz told her that she needed to raise just enough money from family and friends for a one-way ticket to Boston, to get in a cab and go to the emergency room at a certain hospital. The next day when he came to see her on his rounds, she was gone.
Dr. Tenerowicz has experienced first hand that sound and timely medical advice, and the ability to get to the right medical care, is often the difference between life and death.
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Missions & Member TestimonialsDecember 12, 2011
(Photo: Erik Boomer)
Adventurers Jon Turk and Erik Boomer recently have been nominated as “Adventurers of the Year” by National Geographic Adventure, an elite list of 12 athletes who have set records and reached new heights in their fields.
Fitz Cahall described Turk and Boomer’s ground-breaking circumnavigation of Ellesmere Island in the glossy’s pages; the end of the story, the medical evacuation of Turk by a Global Rescue team from the northernmost continually occupied settlement in North America, can be found here.
The duo’s adventure was wrought with danger from the start, as Cahall describes:
“What do you do when a polar bear charges you? We found yelling colorful language was more effective than gentle talking,” says 65-year-old writer and Arctic explorer Jon Turk. “The right tone could communicate, ‘You’re bad. We’re just as bad.’”
Turk and pro kayaker Erik Boomer discovered this when, during the final week of their 1,485-mile circumnavigation of Ellesmere Island, a polar bear ripped a hole in their tent—while five other bears looked on.
The journey around the world’s tenth largest island, which took Turk and Boomer 104 days on skis, in kayaks, and on foot, was considered by polar experts to be the last great unattempted polar expedition, so daunting due to its remoteness and dangerous ice conditions. No one had attempted it before this summer.
You can vote for Turk and Boomer , or any of the other adventurers, on National Geographic Adventure’s website. The other nominees are:
Nick Waggoner, skier
Travis Rice, snowboarder
Cory Richards, climber
Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner, mountaineer
Jennifer Pharr Davis, hiker
Carissa Moore, surfer
Alastair Humphreys, adventurer
Danny Mac Askill, rider
Lakpa Tsheri Sherpa and Sano Babu Sunuwar, mountaineers
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NewsDecember 9, 2011
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NewsDecember 5, 2011
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NewsNovember 21, 2011
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Missions & Member TestimonialsNovember 14, 2011
Global Rescue’s recent security evacuation of climbers from a miner’s riot in Indonesia is the subject of a story in Outdoor Life, in an article written by Tim MacWelch, author of “The Survivalist” column and founder of the Earth Connection School of Wilderness Survival. He writes:
Imagine the thrill of mountain climbing in the remotest parts of the world. Fun, right? Now imagine that someone in your group just received a critical injury. You manage to haul the injured man to the nearest medical care facility, only to find a full blown riot taking place there. Your fun just got replaced with a sick feeling in the pit of your stomach.
Now let’s change gears a third time. Imagine the relief you would feel after a sat phone call said a chopper was on the way. Global Rescue just performed such a security evacuation for a group of climbers in the highlands of Papua, Indonesia, after the party found themselves trapped in a violent uprising…
Forget that stupid gym membership–I just figured out a better membership that I want for Christmas. Let us know in the comments if you have had a hairy situation where you could have used an extraction; or needed medical, security or rescue services on the ground.
Read the full story here.
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NewsNovember 11, 2011
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NewsNovember 9, 2011
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Missions & Member TestimonialsNovember 3, 2011
Global Rescue has performed a security evacuation for a group of climbers in the highlands of Papua, Indonesia, after the party found itself trapped in a violent uprising.
The group was camping at the base of Carstensz Pyramid, the tallest point in Oceania and one of the Seven Summits, when a large rock slide injured some of the group’s porters, one of them critically. The nearest medical aid was at the adjacent Grasberg mine, which is located about 50 miles outside of Timika, Indonesia. The severely injured porter was treated at the mine’s clinic.
The Grasberg mine sits on the largest known reserve of gold ore in an otherwise impoverished region, and has been a political flashpoint for many years. The frequent uprisings in the region have been described by the New York Times as “a seemingly unending conflict in a part of the world famous for both its awesome remoteness and the incredible wealth on and beneath the ground.”
When the climbers arrived, the mine was in the midst of a labor strike that had escalated to a violent riot. The road from the mine to Timika was blocked by protesters and large piles of rocks. There were several reports of travelers being attacked along the road, leaving no viable overland exit for the party.
One of the climbers, who had purchased a security membership with Global Rescue, called the company’s Boston Operations Center for assistance. The company’s security specialists ascertained that the member was in danger and arranged a helicopter to transport him and the group to the airport in Timika, where they boarded their previously scheduled flights home.