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What’s In Your ‘Go-Bag’?

When you’re in trouble in the middle of nowhere, what do you want to have in your “go” bag? Global Rescue experts break down the basics of what you should pack in an emergency preparedness…

When you’re in trouble in the middle of nowhere, what do you want to have in your “go” bag? Global Rescue experts break down the basics of what you should pack in an emergency preparedness bag.

“The first thing you want to do before you go anywhere is tell someone where you’re going,” Global Rescue security personnel recommends.

It’s always advisable to leave that person with Global Rescue’s phone number in the event of an emergency. You should also have the number programmed into your cell phone or satellite phone.

First and Second Lines of Essentials

When packing for the trip, there is a “first line” and a “second line” of essentials. Global Rescue experts define the “first line” as items carried on your body. Keep a packaged, detailed map, a quality compass — not a cheap one, but one that was really built for navigation — and a GPS, all tethered with a lanyard so you can plot your movements on the map as you go.

You should, of course, also carry some kind of multi-tool. The Red Cross has suggestions for an emergency preparedness bag that you can use at home or take with you.

Addressing Five Basic Needs

The second line is a go bag, which addresses five basic needs: shelter, food and water, warmth, signaling and first aid. The Federal Emergency Management Agency offers emergency preparedness bag ideas for different natural disasters, such as flooding and winter weather.

You’ll want something to protect yourself from the rain if you’re lost or immobile in the wilderness. Bring an eight-foot by 10-foot tarp and 50 to 250 feet of parachute line. You might also need it to protect yourself from the wind.

The next thing to put in the go bag is some clothes to keep warm. Leave the cotton at home and bring something that wicks moisture away from the body. Even though you may be traveling in the hot sun during the day, it will be a lot colder at night. A pair of gloves always comes in handy.

Be prepared to start a fire: metal matches or stormproof matches and a small case of cotton balls soaked in Vaseline should do the trick.

Don’t travel anywhere without some access to water. Bring along a canteen or a Naplene bottle, or a Camelbak, etc., along with some iodine tablets to drop into any water you’ve found from natural sources.

For food, make sure you have a day’s worth of rations. Global Rescue staff usually pack a few energy bars.

The next thing to fit in the go bag: signaling devices. Pencil flares are very compact, a small strobe light would be helpful, and definitely bring a whistle.

The Bare Essentials

Finally, a first aid kit. A stripped down kit would include the bare essentials: a Sam splint, some Ace bandages and gauze.

For more complete kits, have a look at wildernessmedical.com or check out our post on what to pack in a first aid kit. And don’t forget to add your Global Rescue card to your go bag in case you need medical evacuation services. If you’ve got a GPS unit with you and cellular or satellite coverage, help is a phone call away.

Click here to learn more about Global Rescue travel memberships.

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Study abroad safety in the spotlight

Are your students safe when they study abroad? According to an article in USA Today, programs are not doing nearly enough to mitigate the many risks facing college students who enroll in study abroad programs.

Are your students safe when they study abroad? According to an article today in USA Today, programs are not doing nearly enough to mitigate the many risks facing college students who enroll in study abroad programs.

The author recounts the story of Jenee Klotz, an American student who was sexually assaulted while studying in Jamaica, and whose program director allegedly dropped her off at the airport the next day “still wearing pajama bottoms and with dried blood on her neck and chest.”

Then there were the eight University of Washington students in Ghana who had to request a medical evacuation when they contracted malaria and dengue fever. After complaining that the university did not do enough to safeguard their health, they were awarded a partial refund. (The article did not point out specifically if they had paid for the medical evacuation itself, which can cost uninsured parents tens of thousands of dollars.) As a result, the UW faculty received more training in this sort of crisis response.

These universities may have suffered a slap in the face, but at least their programs did not face the sort of lawsuits brought by the parents of four students who died in a bus crash in India in 1996. Or by the parents of a 16-year-old who sued the programs who ran his high school exchange, after one of the leaders supposedly denied his request for medical help. The boy died of complications arising from his diabetes.

As much as school programs now realize that protecting their students abroad includes having a comprehensive medical evacuation plan, the reality is that few university professors and program directors are prepared to deal with serious medical emergencies.

“I discovered that it was impossible to rely fully on my university to take care of me,” recalled Rebecca Orozco, a University of Southern California student who suffered irreparable damage to one of her bones after a nightmarish scenario in a hospital in southern Spain. She was hit by a car, broke her pelvis in two places, fractured one of her vertebrae and dislocated her elbow, and faced substandard care.

“The summer program director, along with my university, could only assist to a certain extent and the majority of the responsibility fell on the shoulders of my parents and myself,” she said.

Even if the program has insurance for a medical evacuation or security evacuation, professors and directors rarely have the time and experience to coordinate their student’s healthcare or safety when the worst happens. This exposes their programs to significant liability.
 
Following the number of suits filed against study abroad programs were calls for legislation that would clearly outline their liability in these cases, but colleges successfully argued that such laws would kill the concept of study abroad altogether.

Terry Hartle of the American Council on Education, which represents higher education in Washington, was quoted in the article as saying: “We want students to study abroad … and we want them to be safe. But if we wanted to send students to places where we were sure nothing bad could ever possibly happen to them, we probably wouldn’t send them anywhere.”

Of course, no program can absolutely guarantee the safety of their students in Moscow or Cairo any more than they can guarantee their safety in Memphis or Kalamazoo. But they can take steps to protect their health and security abroad by enrolling in Global Rescue, and in the process protect themselves legally.

To learn more about how Global Rescue can provide critical emergency resources to your student, child or study abroad program, please explore our website.

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Global Rescue provides medevac for hunter in Ethiopia

Suffering a stroke anywhere is a life threatening experience, but when it happens at 10,000 feet in a desolate corner of East Africa, it becomes that much more frightening. One of our members was hunting…

The highlands of Ethiopia are populated with some of the world’s most interesting game animals, from lions and leopards to elephants and buffalo. As dangerous as these animals can be at close range, the greatest perils to our health on Safari sometimes come from within.

Suffering a stroke anywhere is a life threatening experience, but when it happens at 10,000 feet in a desolate corner of East Africa, it becomes that much more frightening. One of our members was hunting there a few weeks ago, in the mountains of Ethiopia, when his wife and his professional hunting guide noticed that his speech was slurred. He exhibited other signs of what those in the medical field term an altered mental state. These, along with decreased motor function in oneside of the body, are the tell-tale signs of a stroke. Realizing the severity of his client’s condition, the professional hunter drove him to the nearest medical facility and then called Global Rescue.

It might be a stretch to call this field clinic a medical facility. In the hunter’s description it was more of a clinic with haphazard care – in fact, the patient had his own blanket stolen from him by one of the nurses, who then curled up for the night with it on the “hospital” floor. Needless to say, there were no highly trained neurosurgeons at his bedside to monitor his condition. All this, along with the persistent language barriers and general chaos of the clinic, made the man’s wife and the professional hunter extremely nervous.

Global Rescue immediately scrambled an air ambulance to the clinic in Addis Ababa, which evacuated him and his hunting party to the best neurological facility in Nairobi, Kenya. There he was met by a deployed Global Rescue paramedic and treated and monitored by a U.S.-trained neurosurgeon. After viewing the CT scans, Global Rescue doctors cleared him for air travel and he was medically evacuated back to the United States.

There is little in the way of treatment for a patient who has suffered a minor stroke, but it is imperative to prevent further damage or death by closely monitoring the patient’s condition – something that was impossible to do in the clinic in Ethiopia. Had his condition worsened, the medical evacuation to Nairobi might well have saved his life.

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Bulletproof Blog’s Interview with CEO Dan Richards

Bulletproof Blog asked Global Rescue CEO Dan Richards how companies can prepare for the next crisis.

What are the salient crisis preparedness issues?

DR: The saying is that generals are always fighting the last war. Well, people are always preparing for what they’ve experienced. Typically, that is the last crisis they faced. But changes for which you may not be at all prepared define the very nature of crisis. 

Take a look at flu preparedness. The crisis happens in a minor way every year, in a major way every thirty years, and in a terrible way every one-hundred years. But we never know what’s going to happen and it’s a challenge getting corporations and institutions to invest the resources – both dollars and man-hours—to properly prepare. And you never know until the crisis occurs if you’ve done enough. 

There’s a big market for crisis consultants, for disaster preparedness, for systems redundancy. The problem is in actually making all the plans operational. It’s just human nature to put together a plan and then let it rot on the shelf. When it needs to be put into operation, people have no idea what to do and haven’t been trained to do anything. That’s where companies like ours come in, to ensure that plans can be implemented when needed. 

What can companies do to be more prepared for crises? What can a CEO do? 

DR: They must set up clear decision-making structures and put people in place who can grasp the problems occurring, make decisions about what to do next, and put those decisions into action. Those people aren’t always the people sitting in the C-Suite.  What are CEOs spending their time thinking about? It’s not, how am I going to respond to crisis? Instead: How am I going to grow the business, make this acquisition, continue negotiations. 

That said, what these people do during crises is incredibly important because they’re the leaders everybody’s looking to. The solution all around is to train and simulate various crises. The quality of the training, how realistic it is, will determine whether you’ll have a successful outcome when the crisis occurs.

What dangers are there for companies that try to think up crisis response plans during actual crises?

It’s a great question because it’s something we see all the time. Those are the 2 a.m. phone calls that come into our operations center from a company with 10 people in Lebanonas the Hezbollah-Israeli conflict is starting, and they’ve got no idea what to do. We’ve actually had that happen. No idea what to do. 

When it come time to mobilize, different corporate departments can even act in obstructionist ways, interfering with people trying to solve the crisis. We had a Fortune 25 company retain us to rescue their people. They approached us as if they were purchasing tool supplies. The purchasing division had to be involved, so did procurement, and legal. Everybody wanted something.

What it came down to, finally, was a C-Suite executive had to assert himself and cut through the bureaucracy that was preventing us from saving his people. We’ve seen it over and over. Sometimes these organizations get out of the way and let the problem be solved, and sometimes they don’t. 

So here too we’re talking about planning – in particular, anticipating bureaucratic issues before the crisis. The lawyer negotiating your contract can’t be the one with all the power. You can’t let that happen when everything is on the line.

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Turkish sailors and a bad place for a toothache

If you consider yourself a Naval trivia buff, here's one for you:What is the only dental-capable ship in the Combined Task Force in the Gulf of Aden?

If you consider yourself a Naval trivia buff, here’s one for you:
What is the only dental-capable ship in the Combined Task Force in the Gulf of Aden?

If you answered the USS Boxer, you probably work there.

The history of dentistry heroics at sea may not be the stuff of legend, but at least two Turkish sailors on an anti-piracy mission off the Horn of Africa may beg to differ.

The two men aboard the TCG Girasun found themselves with stinging toothaches earlier this week. For those of us who live 20 minutes from our dentists’ offices, this is not so newsworthy. But it is when you’re floating on one of the Turkish Navy’s G-class frigates off the coast of some of the least-developed and unstable countries in the world.

Both sailors required root canals, and one of them had a chipped tooth.

“It was causing him quite a bit of pain,” said Lt Christopher Henninger, DMD, the Boxer’s dental officer. He added that, without the Americans’ intervention, the men would likely have required a medical evacuation.
The Turkish medical office aboard the Girasun, who acted as a translator during the intervention, said he was “honored” to come aboard the Americans’ vessel and view their medical capabilities. “The entire crew has been very welcoming,” he said.

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The Hunting Report – Profile of a recent Global Rescue mission in Africa

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Global Rescue offers emergency evacuations for security threats

The rising bloodshed has prompted emergency evacuation company Global Rescue to offer some peace of mind when their members travel to Egypt and other countries where terrorist attacks are a perennial risk.

A tourist and a toddler walk past a bombed store in Dahab (AP)


In 2007, for the third straight year, Egypt was ranked the number-one adventure travel destination, thanks in part to blood-pumping Jeep rides through the Sinai Desert and the underwater thrills of the Red Sea in Sharm el-Sheikh.

Unfortunately for tourists, though, some of the most hair-raising experiences in Egypt are not meant to thrill, but to terrorize.

Ten years ago, 62 tourists and tour guides were massacred at the Temple of Hatshepsut, in Luxor. In 2004, bomb attacks on hotels in the Sinai killed 34. The following year, blasts in downtown Sharm accounted for the deadliest attack in the country’s history, killing 85. Two dozen others were slaughtered in 2006 in the Red Sea resort of Dahab.

The rising bloodshed has prompted emergency evacuation company Global Rescue to offer some peace of mind when their members travel to Egypt and other countries where terrorist attacks are a perennial risk. Any time its Security Services members find themselves in imminent danger, Global Rescue will come to extract them from the situation and escort them to safety.

Previously, the company focused its efforts on medical evacuations alone. In the past five years, it had evacuated ailing severely frostbitten hikers from the Himalaya, severely ill students from West Africa, aided a hunter who had lost his vital medication in the remote Yukon, and responded to hundreds of other medical emergencies around the world.

More recently, the calls for help started to take on a different tone: An elderly woman at risk of being trapped by Russian bombs in the capital of the Georgian Republic. American executives isolated in towns throughout Lebanon during the Israeli-Hezbollah conflict. Businessmen in Chad stuck in a hotel in the capital, N’Djamena, as rebels bore down on the city.

Global Rescue fielded those calls and solved those problems for its corporate clients in the past, and now is prepared to extend those services to all of its members.

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PR Newswire – Global Rescue contributes to anti-piracy efforts

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Paul S. Auerbach, MD, MS, FACEP – Founder of the Wilderness Medical Society, Paul Auerbach,…

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Reuters – Global Rescue leads security evacuations from the Republic of Georgia