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Global Rescue interviewed by San Jose Mercury News

Three students back at UC Berkeley after Haiti ordeal.

See the full article here.

Three students back at UC Berkeley after Haiti ordeal

By Matt O’Brien
Contra Costa Times

Updated: 01/20/2010 04:04:56 PM PST
 

BERKELEY — After a tiny aircraft picked up two of them from a remote Haitian runway, all three of the UC Berkeley students stranded in the Caribbean nation after the Jan. 12 earthquake are now back on campus for the first week of the semester, university officials said Wednesday.

A private rescue team of military veterans says it traveled by air and land Sunday to retrieve two graduate students who were stuck in the southwestern port city of Les Cayes.

The town was far enough from the quake’s epicenter to not be severely damaged, but has become a refuge for Haitian evacuees fleeing the capital, Port-au-Prince.

“We were contacted by their insurer, who let us know they were potentially in harm’s way,” said Daniel Richards, director of Boston-based Global Rescue. “Many of the roads were impassable, and the security situation was deteriorating.”

The university said its risk management office was able to keep track of the students because one of them had signed up for the campus travel insurance plan before she left.

Richards said he sent a team by land and air to rescue the students. While the ground team left much earlier, a fixed-wing aircraft was able to be dispatched more quickly, landing on a small runway outside of town…

 

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Listen to Global Rescue’s Daniel Richards interviewed on National Public Radio

Click here for the interview on "Here and Now" with Robin Young.

Click here for the interview on “Here and Now” with Robin Young.

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Global Rescue rescues mission group from Haiti

An article in a Pennsylvania newspaper, the Reading Eagle, recounts the extraction and evacuation of 14 missionaries from Haiti.

An article in a Pennsylvania newspaper, the Reading Eagle, recounts the extraction and evacuation of 14 missionaries from Haiti. Read the full article here
 
 
By Greta Cuyler
Reading Eagle

Six armed men whisked a group of Berks County missionaries out of Haiti over concerns for their safety following last week’s devastating earthquake.

Following two days of rest in Santa Domingo, Dominican Republic, the group of 14 people from Christ (Mertz) Evangelical Lutheran Church in Dryville, near Fleetwood, returned home Tuesday night

“We wanted to come home to our families, but we also wanted to stay and help,” said Sara J. Trupp, 19, of Oley.

The group was in Haiti for nearly a week to do missionary work at a church and orphanage. The earthquake struck Jan. 12, a few days after they arrived.

The group’s travel insurance company, Brotherhood Mutual, hired employees of Global Rescue to get the group out of Haiti.

The men arrived at the compound in the town of Croix des Bouquets on Saturday night, each armed with automatic weapons, said Courtney Renshaw, 20, who is a junior at Alvernia University.

One of the men was an ex-Navy SEAL. Two others were former Green Berets. One didn’t speak English, Renshaw said.

On Sunday morning at 5, the men drove the group in a four-vehicle caravan to the nearby Port-au-Prince airport.

They boarded the first charter plane out of Haiti, Renshaw said.

 

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The Reading Eagle Newspaper – Global Rescue rescues missionaries from Haiti after U.S. Embassy fails…

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The Mercury News – Three students back at UC Berkeley after Haiti ordeal

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No rest for Global Rescue medics, even at trade shows

A 70-year-old man who collapsed from congestive heart failure at the Dallas Safari Club’s annual convention over the weekend at least did so in good company: at a show attended by Global Rescue.

A 70-year-old man who collapsed from congestive heart failure at the Dallas Safari Club’s annual convention over the weekend at least did so in good company: at a show attended by Global Rescue.
 
In the middle of a busy trade show day, a voice came over the public address system asking for a doctor to respond to a medical emergency. A man had slumped over in the elevator while returning from a cigarette break, and those around him had propped him in a chair. The bystanders pointed fingers at other onlookers and directed them to call EMS, while one of them futilely fanned the man’s pale, sweating face.
 
A Global Rescue critical care paramedic who had been manning the company’s booth, heard the announcement and instinctively went for the defibrillator mounted on a wall around the corner.
“I always make a mental note of where they are anytime I walk by one,” he recalled later. As the crowd of onlookers stepped aside, the medic opened the man’s shirt, attached the leads of the machine to his chest in the event he needed to be revived, and then took his blood pressure and other vital signs.
 
A Dallas-area ambulance team arrived after approximately 10-minutes, and the medic transferred the patient into their care.The paramedic received the man’s phone number from one of the latter’s friends, and a follow-up call the next day revealed that he was recovering nicely.
 
 

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Boston Globe features Global Rescue’s efforts in Haiti

From the Boston Globe on Saturday, Jan. 16, 2010, an article titled "In crises, private firms can be a safety net":

From the Boston Globe on Saturday, Jan. 16, 2010, an article titled “In crises, private firms can be a safety net”: 

 

Another private security and rescue firm, Boston-based Global Rescue, is searching for hundreds of people in Haiti, some of whom work for corporations. Chief executive Daniel Richards said an insurance company asked it to find 200 people, but he declined to provide specifics.

The first Global Rescue team, led by a former Navy SEAL and a member of the US Army’s Special Forces, arrived in Haiti Thursday, Richards said, and the company expects to have 30 people on the ground by this morning. Richard said his clients include NASA, the State Department, the Chicago Tribune, and local companies Bain & Co. and EMC Corp.

EMC, whose 40,000 employees around the world are covered by Global Rescue when out of their country of origin, has been a client for two years. The Hopkinton data storage company has used Global Rescue’s services about 10 times for medical emergencies, including to assist an employee who had a cardiac condition, said spokesman Patrick Cooley.

For the full article, click here

 
 

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The Boston Globe – Global Rescue evacuates victims from Haiti

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Global Rescue CEO Dan Richards discusses Haiti on CNN

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The Chronicle of Higher Education – Amid Haiti’s devastation, more missing students turn up, and…

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Global Rescue partners with the Wilderness Medical Society

Global Rescue and the Wilderness Medical Society (WMS) have partnered in order to ensure the safety of Society members.

Global Rescue and the Wilderness Medical Society (WMS) have partnered in order to ensure the safety of Society members.

“There are many reasons to plan ahead for medical advice, evaluation, assistance, and evacuation,” the founder of WMS, Paul Auerbach, M.D., wrote in an article about Global Rescue. “Furthermore, in this time of security risks up to and including armed conflict, kidnapping, and terrorism, one must be aware of how to get help quickly and reliably, because during or immediately after the event is not the time to begin planning”

“The life-saving value of Global Rescue memberships can’t be overstated,” the WMS said in a statement.

“We are extremely pleased that the Wilderness Medical Society has chosen to partner with Global Rescue.  They are the thought leaders in remote medicine and we are the leaders in worldwide rescue, so it is a natural fit” said Daniel L, Richards, Chief Executive Officer of Global Rescue.

Founded in 1983, the Wilderness Medical Society is the world’s leading organization devoted to wilderness medical challenges. Wilderness medicine topics include expedition and disaster medicine, dive medicine, search and rescue, altitude illness, cold- and heat-related illness, wilderness trauma, and wild animal attacks. WMS explores health risks and safety issues in extreme situations such as mountains, jungles, deserts, caves, marine environments, and space.

 

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Skier evacuated from Canadian Rockies, where her knee injury was misdiagnosed

When ski season comes, the phones at our Boston Operations Center ring a little more frequently. Ski accidents resulting in broken bones are reason for serious concern in any country – even in Canada, as…

 

When ski season comes, the phones at our Boston Operations Center ring a little more frequently. Ski accidents resulting in broken bones are reason for serious concern in any country – even in Canada, as one event over the holidays showed.

Just before the holiday break, an 18-year-old American skier in British Columbia crashed and badly injured her right knee. She was taken off the mountain via ambulance to a clinic in the Canadian Rockies, and her coach contacted Global Rescue.

Doctors at the modestly equipped facility diagnosed a type of fracture that the attending orthopedic surgeon assigned to her case believed required surgery within 24 hours. Global Rescue personnel relayed the information to specialists at Johns Hopkins, who confirmed that she should be operated on immediately for that specific injury. Global Rescue organized a first-class flight to her home airport in Boston, departing immediately.

Upon landing in Boston, she was further evaluated at the airport by our medical team and cleared for the two hour ground transport to her hospital of choice. There, she was administered an MRI to check the diagnosis, and doctors realized that in fact she had a different injury, a tibial plateau fracture.

She underwent surgery the next day. A follow-up call to her parents this week revealed that she was recovering nicely, and looking forward to resuming her skiing career in college as soon as her leg heals.