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The Wall Street Journal – Health Matters: Remedies for the Road

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Security Management – Getting Out in a Hurry.

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Outside Magazine: A new company is revolutionizing crisis response

An excerpt from Outside Magazine, April 2011:

 An excerpt from Outside Magazine, April 2011:

By Devon O’Neil

GLOBAL RESCUE fashions itself as a new kind of crisis-response firm: a high-end security blanket with medevac capabilities. While the company occasionally pulls clients out of disaster areas, war zones, and scenes of political turmoil—earlier this year, the team evacuated more than 200 people from Egypt—it works primarily as a medical fixer, quickly arranging for injured travelers to get the care they need. Because of its ability to send medics to, say, the Hima­layas, Global Rescue has become the service of choice for many adventurers. Its diverse client list includes travel outfitter Geographic Expeditions, the U.S. Ski Team, surfers Jordy Smith and Mick Fanning, and mountaineer Ed Viesturs. “If you’re out there in the boonies and you need to get rescued, you never know what it’s going to cost,” says Viesturs. “I don’t know of any other company that does what they do.”

The American Alpine Club (AAC) provides Global Rescue medevac coverage to all of its 8,000 members. That came in handy last March for alpinist Steve House when he fell 80 feet off the north face of Mount Temple, in Banff National Park, fracturing his pelvis, spine, and several ribs. After a team from Parks Canada extracted House, Global Rescue sent a paramedic to stay with him at a Calgary hospital, then flew him home to Oregon in a private jet. Global Rescue also recovers bodies—most recently, the remains of American climber Joe Puryear, who died last October on Tibet’s 24,170-foot Labuche Kang.

A basic Global Rescue membership with medevac costs $329 per year. Individual security coverage, which includes evacuations from war zones, runs $655… Red Bull, the U.S. State Department, and NASA are among the clients. Though it might seem surprising that the State Department would hire a private company to safeguard its employees, doing so may prevent a broken bone from becoming a diplomatic incident.

“We don’t fit any of the categories that people apply to us,” says Richards, a muscular 215-pound graduate of Middlebury College and Dartmouth’s Tuck Business School. “We’re certainly not in the insurance business. We’re not a security firm—we don’t guard static locations. We are in the rescue business. We respond to crises. At the end of the day, we represent the red button these people push.”

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Outside Magazine – A brash company is revolutionizing crisis response

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Global Rescue performs field rescue, medical evacuation from Cameroon

Global Rescue has rescued a client from a remote camp in Cameroon over the weekend and transported him to his home in Eastern Europe.

Global Rescue has rescued a client from a remote camp in Cameroon over the weekend and transported him to his home in Eastern Europe.

Bela Hidvegi, a veteran of African travels, was hunting dwarf buffalo in the rainforest about 15 hours by car from the capital, Yaounde, when he began to experience nausea, vomiting and digestive problems. A rudimentary local clinic diagnosed him with malaria and prescribed medication.

Because his condition continued to deteriorate over the next 48 hours, Global Rescue’s medical team reviewed the case, believed the diagnosis to be incorrect and recommended an immediate field rescue from the jungle to Yaounde.

Global Rescue dispatched a helicopter to Hidvegi’s camp near the town of Doume and flew him to the capital for further evaluation. There, he was seen at a private hospital, diagnosed with a bacterial infection and prescribed antibiotics. Hidvegi was then transported to his home in Budapest. He is expected to make a full recovery.

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Global Rescue evacuates clients from Tokyo

Global Rescue crisis response teams transported a group of clients from Tokyo to Southern Japan on Thursday.

Global Rescue crisis response teams transported a group of clients from Tokyo to Southern Japan on Thursday.  The transport was initiated due to rising concerns about water and supplies contaminated with radioactive material in the capital, and to assist those suffering from post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) associated with the earthquake and tsunami.

Nine employees of a Global Rescue client were escorted via convoy to a peninsula in the South where radiation levels were safe. Several employees exhibited symptoms consistent with PTSD after the massive earthquake, tsunami and nuclear fallout left thousands dead, missing and homeless.

Global Rescue is also providing supplies of bottled water and other basic necessities to its clients in urban areas around the capital.  The company’s on-site crisis response professionals are providing guidance and leadership regarding how to best shelter-in-place pending a possible land, air or sea evacuation from the capital. 

Three corporations with an active presence in Japan have received Global Rescue’s services for more than 200 employees.

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Global Rescue’s recent supply mission to Northern Japan highlighted on NECN

New England Cable News' Peter Howe visited Global Rescue on Wednesday to discuss with CEO Dan Richards the transport of food, water, medicine and other supplies to 200 of its clients in Northern Japan. Here…

New England Cable News’ Peter Howe visited Global Rescue on Wednesday to discuss with CEO Dan Richards the transport of food, water, medicine and other supplies to 200 of its clients in Northern Japan. Here is a transcript.

(NECN: Peter Howe, Boston/Brookline, Mass.) Citing fears of radioactive contamination from the Japan’s damaged nuclear reactors, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has banned imports of 11 types of produce and dairy products produced in regions near the Fukushima plants. 

Hong Kong said it won’t accept imports of Japanese meat, dairy, and fish unless Japan conducts tests on them. And in Tokyo, officials began urging parents of small babies and infants not to let them drink Tokyo tap water, after tests showed radioactivity in the water at levels twice what sets off alarms about thyroid cancer dangers for infants.

It all adds up to one more blow for struggling Japan, which has lived through an earthquake and tsunami that have caused a newly estimated $300 billion-plus in damage, and which with the still-raging nuclear power plant crisis now faces a crisis rippling through it agriculture and fishing industries and basic food and water supply networks…

…The Japan food concerns are being felt 8,000 miles away in Boston, where CEO Dan Richards of Global Rescue, a [crisis response] company, has been taking charge of getting safe supplies to about 200 employees of U.S. companies based in Japan.

Richards said he is not allowed to divulge the names of the companies that employ them but said, “We have, obviously clients that are concerned about consuming food and water in the places where there might be a radioactive danger … We’ve been actually bringing food, water, fuel, supplies and other things that are necessary to sustain life into these devastated regions.” Richards said that “getting ground vehicles into these places has been very tough” and often requires convoluted, circuitous routes to get around damaged areas. Global Rescue has already begun making arrangements to evacuate U.S. company workers from Tokyo and other parts of Japan if it turns out the radioactive threat to food, water, and air worsens.

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New England Cable News – U.S., others, ban some Japan food imports

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Global Rescue delivers urgent supplies to clients in Northern Japan

Global Rescue security teams have provided urgent aid to clients in Northern Japan whose supplies were nearly exhausted in the aftermath of last week’s tsunami.

Global Rescue security teams have provided urgent aid to clients in Northern Japan whose supplies were nearly exhausted in the aftermath of last week’s tsunami.

Teams transported food, water, fuel and other basic necessities to employees and their families living in and around Sendai, including medicines for the ill, and essential business equipment to a client who was unable to access the company’s offices. The teams were required to take alternate routes due to closed highways and destroyed infrastructure.

Global Rescue continues to oversee the safety of its clients throughout Japan and is monitoring reports of nuclear radiation levels in urban areas that could rise depending on meteorological conditions. The company’s on-site crisis response professionals are providing security advice on how to shelter-in-place, have created command structures in the event of an emergency and have established evacuation contingency plans involving both land and air assets which would be implemented should there be indications that radiation in those areas is approaching harmful levels.

Three corporations with an active presence in Japan have retained Global Rescue’s services for more than 200 employees.

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Voice of America highlights Global Rescue’s crisis response plans in Japan

The Voice of America recently interviewed Global Rescue CEO Dan Richardsabout the company's preparation in Japan:

The Voice of America recently interviewed Global Rescue CEO Dan Richardsabout the company’s preparation in Japan:

Private security companies that specialize in civilian rescue operations say that despite the horrific scenes coming out of Japan, the country is probably better prepared for disaster than almost any other nation in the world.

Thousands of foreign nationals are trying to get out Japan and away from its rising chaos and nuclear threat. And help is available – from private companies with experience in such situations.

Daniel Richards, CEO of Global Rescue, based in Boston, Massachusetts, said, “We obviously do know that the country, Japan, for a long time has suffered from earthquake and tsunami threats and that these events do sometimes occur. So, as a company that has clients who rely on us for these types of crisis response services in this region, we have been preparing for these kinds of events in this region due to the frequency with which they occur.”

Global Rescue has been involved in a number of large scale evacuations, most recently in Libya…

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Voice of America – Private Companies on Standby to Aid in Evacuations From Japan

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Global Rescue on standby to evacuate clients in Japan as radiation risks loom

Global Rescue continues to oversee the safety of its clients in Japan and is monitoring reports of nuclear radiation levels in urban areas where those levels could rise depending on meteorological conditions.

Global Rescue continues to oversee the safety of its clients in Japan and is monitoring reports of nuclear radiation levels in urban areas where those levels could rise depending on meteorological conditions.

The company’s on-site crisis response professionals are providing security advice on how to shelter-in-place, are creating command structures in the event of an emergency and have established evacuation contingency plans involving both land and air assets which would be implemented should there be indications that radiation in those areas is approaching harmful levels.

Two corporations with an active presence in Japan have retained Global Rescue’s services to more than 150 employees.

“Nobody yet knows how bad this is going to get,” said Global Rescue CEO Dan Richards, “but our teams are prepared to evacuate immediately should the need arise.”