Categories:
Mission BriefsResourcesNovember 3, 2025
A Japanese member suffering from snow blindness and facial sunburn on Mount Aconcagua was unable to see. Medical professionals on scene diagnosed the member with bilateral conjunctivitis and a 2nd-degree face burn caused by not wearing solar protection gear. Global Rescue Operations initiated an airborne field rescue and ground transport to a hospital in Mendoza. The member was safely evacuated from the mountain, treated and released with medications from the hospital.
Categories:
Mission BriefsResourcesNovember 3, 2025
A Miami member became ill with pneumonia and possible arrhythmia during a cruise around French Polynesia. The ship’s medical team started treatment for him, activated French Polynesia Emergency Services and transported him to a hospital in Morrea for further evaluation. The hospital’s medical team determined the member’s symptoms warranted transport to a higher level of care in Papeete, French Polynesia. Following his transport to the hospital in Papeete, the emergency department medical team admitted the member to the intensive care unit for assessment, testing, and intervention. Meanwhile, the member’s oxygen consumption was too high for a trans-Pacific flight home and recovery was not progressing. Global Rescue deployed a medical operations specialist to oversee the member’s care and be his medical escort once deemed fit-to-fly. Eventually, the member’s recovery progressed sufficiently that he was stable for flight. Global Rescue initiated an immediate, and successful, transport via commercial stretcher and dedicated air ambulance of the member for continued care at a higher-level facility in Miami.
Categories:
Mission BriefsResourcesNovember 3, 2025
High climbs are not easy. Twisted ankles, high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE), gastrointestinal trouble, high altitude cerebral edema (HACE), snow blindness and many other ailments, like frostbite, challenge climbers at every step, uphill and down. A U.S. member developed first-degree frostbite in his toes while on Mount Aconcagua. Global Rescue provided an immediate helicopter field rescue off the mountain and ground transportation to a hospital in Mendoza. The member was successfully evacuated, evaluated at the medical center, given medication and discharged the same day.
Categories:
Mission BriefsResourcesNovember 3, 2025
A U.S. member paragliding in Colombia contacted Global Rescue following an accident injured his arm. After landing, a broken branch fell on his left wrist quickly causing his fingers to swell and become discolored with an on-and-off tingling sensation. He applied a bandage and ice compress overnight in his hotel with no relief. The next day he went to the hospital for imaging. A Global Rescue medical team reviewed the case and determined a surgical intervention could be necessary and recommended that the member have an in-person evaluation with an orthopedic doctor. Global Rescue helped the member secure a flight to his Washington state home of record where he proceeded to the hospital for further evaluation.
Categories:
Mission BriefsResourcesNovember 3, 2025
A Romanian member fell during an expedition on Aconcagua in Argentina sustaining cervical and pelvic injuries. Global Rescue was contacted and an immediate helicopter field rescue and medical evacuation was initiated to bring him to a hospital in nearby Mendoza. Upon examination, it was determined that the member sustained a wrist fracture and a contusion. Following treatment, the member returned to his home of residence in Tunari.
Categories:
Mission BriefsResourcesNovember 3, 2025
A member from India was suffering from disabling lower back pain and was unable to walk while on Mount Aconcagua. He was evaluated by medical clinicians and given an evacuation order and pain medications. He received no relief from the pain medication, his condition worsened, and he remained unable to walk. Global Rescue provided airborne field rescue and ground transportation to a nearby hospital where the member was evaluated and diagnosed with Lumbago with sciatica. He was prescribed pain medication, and topical ointment and discharged on the same day.
Categories:
NewsOctober 31, 2025
Categories:
TravelOctober 31, 2025
Article Highlights:
- Discover the thrill of motorcycle overlanding on the Pamir Highway and through the ‘Stans’ along the historic Silk Road.
- Experience high-altitude 4×4 adventures across Tibet, including Everest Base Camp and sacred Himalayan lakes.
- Learn the difference between overlanding, off-roading, and traditional road trips.
- Follow the van Stralen family’s journey from backyard camping to full-time global overlanders.
- Understand why Global Rescue protection is essential for safe overland travel in remote Asia.
Overlanding is more than just travel. It is the art of self-reliant, vehicle-based exploration where the journey itself is the reward. The road is the destination, and the vehicle — be it motorcycle or 4×4 — is both companion and lifeline. Across Asia, where history meets untamed landscapes, overland adventure reaches its peak. From riding ancient Silk Road caravan trails on a motorcycle to navigating high-altitude Tibetan passes by four-wheel drive, Asia offers some of the world’s most challenging and inspiring overland experiences.
At its core, overlanding emphasizes self-sufficiency. Travelers carry their own supplies, food and shelter, preparing to be fully independent in regions without modern services. Vehicles become basecamps, equipped with rooftop tents, recovery gear and off-road modifications. Unlike off-roading, where conquering terrain is the main thrill, overlanding prioritizes exploration and immersion. Unlike car camping, where travelers set up in one location, overlanding is defined by movement. Each day brings a new horizon, a new challenge, a new memory.
Overland adventures can last weeks, months or even years. Routes lead deep into mountain ranges, deserts and jungles, away from tourist hubs and into places where culture and wilderness remain raw and authentic.
Motorcycle Overlanding in Asia: Two-Wheel Freedom
Few experiences capture the raw essence of overlanding like riding a motorcycle across Asia’s remote landscapes. With less gear but more freedom, riders trade comfort for intimacy with the road.
The Pamir Highway and Central Asia offer motorcycle travelers a rugged, unforgettable ride. Known as the “Roof of the World,” the Pamir Highway cuts through Tajikistan, climbing to over 15,000 feet as it snakes across barren plateaus and jagged peaks. The route, part of the ancient Silk Road, reveals caravanserais, Soviet relics and villages where hospitality is legendary.
The pros include breathtaking scenery, cultural immersion and a sense of remoteness. The downsides come from extreme altitude, rough road conditions, complex visas and border crossings.
Nearby Kyrgyzstan provides another motorcycle paradise. Its alpine meadows, yurts and dirt tracks reward those seeking both solitude and camaraderie with nomadic herders. Linking Ashgabat to Bishkek reveals Silk Road ruins and sweeping steppes where history feels alive.
In Mongolia, motorcycle riders find a land seemingly designed for two-wheel exploration. The Gobi Desert offers dunes and endless plains where the horizon stretches forever. Riders encounter nomadic camps, wild horses and ancient Buddhist monasteries. Mongolia offers riders raw wilderness and a sense of vast freedom, with unpaved tracks that seem made for dirt bikes. Yet the same qualities that make it alluring — its extreme remoteness, unpredictable weather, and lack of infrastructure — also make it one of the most challenging overland destinations.
Four-Wheel Overlanding Power
For those traveling with families or carrying more gear, four-wheel vehicles provide range and resilience. Asia’s mountains and deserts demand vehicles capable of handling punishing terrain.
Tibet means high-altitude overland adventure. Few 4×4 journeys match Tibet for sheer drama. From Lhasa, adventurers set off across windswept plateaus, past sacred lakes like Namtso and Yamdrok, and toward Everest Base Camp at 17,000 feet. The route blends cultural immersion with spiritual wonder, as travelers visit ancient monasteries and connect with Tibetan traditions.
Tibet promises iconic destinations, breathtaking scenery, and a rich sense of cultural depth, but travelers must also contend with strict permits, the risk of altitude sickness and a reliance on guides to navigate the region.
Exploring South Asian countries like India, Nepal and Bhutan is an overlanding wonder. Overland 4×4 travel through South Asia is a journey of contrasts. From India’s deserts and jungles to Nepal’s Himalayan passes and Bhutan’s pristine valleys, every border crossed adds a new dimension. Some itineraries last 60 days, linking India, Nepal, Myanmar, Bhutan, Laos, Cambodia and Thailand into one sweeping overland circuit. South Asia rewards overlanders with unmatched cultural variety, diverse landscapes, and warm encounters, yet the journey also brings bureaucratic hurdles, crowded roads and the challenges of seasonal weather extremes.
The jungle routes and crossroads in Thailand, Laos and Cambodia offer tropical 4×4 adventures. Jungle trails, riverside camps, and centuries-old ruins provide both challenge and wonder. This region is ideal for travelers seeking shorter overland trips or as part of a larger continental journey. Overlanders in Southeast Asia will encounter vibrant food and culture, accessible routes and a thriving overlanding community, but the region also tests adventurers with its hot, humid climate, seasonal flooding and complex border bureaucracy.
Family Overlanding
Family road trips are often the first step into overlanding. For some, they evolve into a lifestyle. Carol van Stralen and her family began with RV trips to stay connected with her husband’s business travels. Over time, backyard camping experiments and cross-country journeys turned into seven years of full-time overlanding across continents.
Carol admits she never imagined herself living in a Jeep or shipping vehicles overseas. Yet each small step, from backyard tent mishaps to RV explorations, built confidence and passion. Her advice? Start small, grow gradually and embrace discomfort. Along the way, she and her children built friendships across the world, from surfers in New Zealand to anglers in remote villages.
Her story shows that overlanding is not just for seasoned explorers. With curiosity and patience, any family can discover the joy of life beyond the pavement.
The Global Rescue Connection
Overlanding in Asia is thrilling but carries real risks. Chris Sisson, a Canadian rider, learned this in Mongolia’s Gobi Desert when a crash left him with a broken femur. Remote and vulnerable, he relied on Global Rescue for medical evacuation, hospital coordination and even the comfort of a nurse flown in to stay by his side. His story highlights how quickly adventure can turn into an emergency.
Global Rescue ensures overlanders are never alone in critical moments. From remote deserts to high-altitude passes, a membership provides medical evacuation, expert coordination, and 24/7 support. Whether navigating Central Asia’s Silk Road or Tibet’s passes, the closest hospital may not be the best one, but Global Rescue gets you where you need to be.
For motorcyclists chasing freedom or families in 4x4s seeking connection, Global Rescue is the essential safety net. Overlanding is about self-reliance, but true confidence comes from knowing expert help is only a call away.
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Categories:
TravelOctober 30, 2025
Article Highlights:
- Religious tourism includes pilgrimages, sightseeing and cultural exploration at holy sites like Mecca, Vatican City and Bodhi Gaya.
- Motivations range from spiritual devotion and healing to history, culture and recreational sightseeing.
- Major sites include Jerusalem, Golden Temple in Amritsar and sacred destinations worldwide.
- Risks include crime, scams, crowd dangers and cultural sensitivities requiring vigilance and respect.
- Global Rescue experts provide safety strategies, including local drivers, identity protection and emergency planning.
Religious tourism is one of the oldest and most widespread forms of travel. From the earliest pilgrimages in antiquity to today’s international tours, millions of people cross borders each year to visit holy places, attend festivals or connect with their faith. For some, the journey is about fulfilling a lifelong spiritual duty, while for others it is a quest for culture, history or even adventure.
Religious tourism can be defined as travel for religious purposes, including pilgrimages, spiritual retreats or cultural visits to sacred monuments. Its scope ranges from journeys of deep devotion to recreational sightseeing. For example, a Christian might walk the Camino de Santiago in Spain for personal renewal, while a history enthusiast could visit Jerusalem to learn about its role as a crossroads of faith.
Motivations are as varied as the travelers themselves. For many, the drive comes from devotion, a desire to strengthen their faith or to fulfill a religious obligation. Pilgrims to Mecca embody this, as the Hajj is one of the Five Pillars of Islam and a duty for all Muslims physically and financially able to complete it.
Others seek healing, reflection or inner peace. Bodhi Gaya in India, where the Buddha attained enlightenment, draws Buddhist pilgrims and secular visitors alike who seek tranquility and meditation. Still others are motivated by history, architecture and art, choosing religious tours that highlight the cultural legacy of sacred sites.
Vatican City, Varanasi, Mecca and More
Sacred sites hold a magnetic pull across all faiths. In Vatican City, millions of Catholics and curious travelers flock to St. Peter’s Basilica, the Sistine Chapel and the Papal audiences. In 2024 alone, the Vatican Museums welcomed about 6.8 million visitors, a clear sign of its continued role as both a spiritual and cultural magnet.
For Hindus, Varanasi along the Ganges River is revered as one of the holiest cities on Earth. Pilgrims bathe in the sacred waters at sunrise, believing it purifies the soul and brings liberation from the cycle of rebirth. The ghats along the river combine ritual, devotion and the vibrancy of daily life.
The Golden Temple in Amritsar is the heart of Sikhism. Its gilded façade glows against the waters of the Amrit Sarovar, the pool that surrounds it. Visitors experience not just a visual marvel but also the Sikh tradition of langar, a free communal meal served daily to thousands of people regardless of faith or background.
Jerusalem is another destination central to multiple religions. Christians visit the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Jews pray at the Western Wall and Muslims gather at the Al-Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock. Tourism data shows its popularity: in 2022, Jerusalem hosted about 2.39 million overnight stays by foreign visitors, making it Israel’s most visited city.
Mecca, in Saudi Arabia, represents the pinnacle of religious tourism for Muslims. Each year millions perform the Hajj pilgrimage. In 2025, 1.67 million pilgrims attended, while in 2024 the figure stood at 1.83 million. Even outside of Hajj, the Umrah pilgrimage keeps Mecca’s flow of visitors constant throughout the year.
Bodh Gaya in India is sacred to Buddhists as the site where Siddhartha Gautama attained enlightenment beneath the Bodhi tree. The Mahabodhi Temple complex attracts around 4 million visitors annually in normal years, with 2023 figures showing about 3 million domestic and 300,000 foreign visitors. Surrounding monasteries make the town a global hub of Buddhist culture.
These examples highlight how religious destinations serve as both spiritual centers and cultural treasures, welcoming not only the faithful but also those seeking understanding of global traditions.
Activities in Religious Tourism
The activities undertaken during religious tours are diverse. Some travelers participate in worship services, prayer rituals or meditation retreats. Others attend large-scale festivals, which are among the most memorable aspects of religious tourism.
The Kumbh Mela in India is the largest religious gathering on Earth. The 2025 Prayag Maha Kumbh Mela drew over 450 million devotees across its six-week span, with more than 500 million reported to have taken the holy dip in the rivers by mid-February. The event’s staggering scale underscores both the devotion of participants and the logistical challenges of managing such a gathering.
In Mecca, Ramadan transforms the city with night prayers, communal meals and reflection, while Christmas in Bethlehem draws pilgrims to the Church of the Nativity for candlelit services. In Bodh Gaya, Vesak marks the Buddha’s birth, enlightenment and death, filling the temple complex with lanterns and meditation. Amritsar’s Baisakhi festival likewise immerses visitors in song, prayer and Sikh tradition.
Religious tourism can take many forms. Pilgrimages are the most traditional—lengthy, often arduous journeys designed to fulfill spiritual duties or foster deeper connection. Examples include the Hajj to Mecca, the trek to Santiago de Compostela in Spain and the journey to Bodhi Gaya.
Sightseeing, on the other hand, may involve shorter trips with more emphasis on history and culture. Visitors to Vatican City might not all be Catholic, but they come to experience the art, the architecture and the unique sense of place.
The scale of religious tourism is vast, spanning local, national and international travel. Hajj draws close to 2 million people annually in a matter of days, while the Maha Kumbh Mela can bring together hundreds of millions over several weeks. Jerusalem, with its millions of overnight stays and Bodh Gaya with millions of annual visitors, show how religious tourism operates not only in bursts but as a steady current of travel year-round.
Respectful behavior is crucial. Photography may be restricted, certain dress codes enforced and rituals tightly regulated. Tourists expecting to party during major holy days may find themselves unwelcome. Understanding and observing these customs not only ensures safety but also deepens the travel experience.
Challenges and Dangers of Religious Tourism
Despite its rewards, religious tourism carries inherent risks. Religious and cultural sensitivities demand respect from visitors. Behavior considered normal elsewhere may be perceived as offensive or even blasphemous in sacred spaces.
Crowds are another significant challenge. Pilgrimages often involve hundreds of thousands of people converging in the same location. “Like any other place teeming with people, crowds can make it challenging to move around the city,” says Kent Webber, Senior Manager, Intelligence Products & Services at Global Rescue. “They also increase the risk of pickpocketing, car theft, identity theft and other crimes.”
To thwart would-be thieves, Harding Bush, associate director of Security Operations at Global Rescue and a former Navy SEAL, recommends practical safeguards. Travelers should wear clothing with interior or zippered pockets, avoid flashy jewelry and keep luggage tags hidden. “Try not to be the ‘easiest’ target,” Bush advises. “Criminals do surveillance. Travelers should pay attention and not let down their guard.”
Navigating the Practical Hurdles
Logistical issues can complicate travel. Road closures during major festivals are common, as are long waits at airports and checkpoints. Hiring a local driver can be invaluable. “Driving a vehicle in a foreign country is a high-risk activity,” says Bush. “Always hire a local driver who knows the area. Being unaware or confused by directions can bring you to a vulnerable location or make you an obvious target for attack.”
Services may also be disrupted during religious holidays. Shops, markets and public transport may close without notice, leaving travelers without access to essentials. The best defense is preparation—checking with hotel staff, asking for local maps and planning alternate routes for food, water and transportation.
The Global Rescue Connection
Religious tourism offers powerful opportunities for spiritual growth, cultural enrichment and unforgettable journeys. But it also presents unique challenges that demand preparation, awareness and respect. Past Global Rescue articles on climbing expeditions, natural disasters and international emergencies illustrate the same lesson: preparation and reliable support are essential.
Visitors should stay informed about current situations in several ways. First, keep that cell phone charged and frequently check your My Global Rescue App for up-to-date information on developing situations in your area. Keep an ear tuned to local media as well. You can download the My Global Rescue App here for Apple and here for Google Play.
Travelers should also register with their country’s embassy and sign up for alerts and advisories. American citizens should join the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) to receive emails and text messages from the United States Embassy in the event of emergencies in the area.
A Global Rescue membership means access to expert medical and security advice, evacuation services and real-time updates. Whether you’re navigating the crowded streets of Vatican City, walking barefoot through the Golden Temple in Amritsar, circling the Kaaba in Mecca or meditating at Bodh Gaya, having reliable support ensures your journey remains a source of inspiration rather than stress.
Categories:
Business TravelOctober 29, 2025
Article Highlights:
- Common health risks for international business travelers and how to prevent them.
- Region-specific illnesses, from respiratory infections to mosquito-borne diseases.
- Key vaccinations and hygiene practices for safe and productive business trips.
- The impact of climate, sanitation and food safety on traveler health.
- Essential travel tips to minimize health risks and ensure a smooth trip.
International business now happens in airport lounges, coworking lofts and hotel lobbies from Lisbon to Lagos. Business travelers sprint between client sites while digital nomads stitch projects together across visas and time zones. What both groups share is exposure to unfamiliar health systems, evolving entry rules and diverse risks that can turn a routine trip into a medical crisis.
What does a practical outline and plan for employee and employer medical emergency preparation tailored to international business travel and the realities of location-independent work look like? It integrates pre-travel best practices, duty-of-care expectations and the illnesses business travelers encounter most often.
Business travelers tend to move on compressed schedules with fixed meetings and immovable deadlines. Digital nomads stay longer, often in short-term rentals or remote regions to stretch budgets and find community. Both may face fragmented care, language barriers and uncertain reimbursement. That makes a clear, shared plan essential: who to call first, where to go and how to pay. Employers are responsible for duty of care, establishing policies, training and vetted resources, while workers must execute the plan and keep their own health information current. A travel-tested framework removes hesitation when minutes matter.
Pre-Travel Health Check Foundation
A pre-travel health check means building safety into the itinerary before wheels-up. Start with a health consultation to review conditions and medications, get destination-specific vaccinations and collect printed and digital prescriptions. Pack a compact first-aid kit with pain relievers, antiseptics, dressings, a digital thermometer, oral rehydration salts and personal items you actually use. Research local hospitals, clinics and pharmacies, not just by star rating but by capability: 24/7 emergency intake, imaging, ICU beds and staff who speak your language. Global Rescue members can obtain destination reports that consolidate health risks, entry rules, security issues and evolving alerts so they are not piecing critical guidance together from random websites of questionable freshness.
Employer Playbook: Duty of Care in Action
Policy without practice is theater. Build your plan around five pillars and train to them.
- Risk assessment and approvals. Classify trips by risk profile: city pair, itinerary length, remoteness and traveler health. Require a pre-travel checklist for medium and high-risk trips with vaccination verification and confirmed local medical facilities.
- Coverage that actually covers. Distinguish evacuation and advisory services from health insurance. Business travel insurance may reimburse costs after the fact but may not coordinate an extraction from a remote region or arrange a higher level of care. Ensure your program includes medical and security advisory, field rescue where feasible and evacuation to a home-country hospital of choice when medically necessary.
- Clear communications tree. Publish a one-page emergency card with 24/7 assistance numbers, policy IDs and the order of calls: local emergency number first when life-threatening, then your assistance provider, then your internal travel risk contact. Store those numbers in the phone and on a physical card kept with the passport.
- Data and privacy. Centralize traveler profiles — allergies, medications, conditions, emergency contacts — behind appropriate access controls. Train managers to request only what’s needed. For digital nomads contracted by the company, extend the same standards where duty of care applies.
- Training and drills. Run short scenario exercises: severe abdominal pain in São Paulo at 23:00, motorcycle crash outside Chiang Mai, chest pain on a 14-hour flight. Rehearsal turns panic into muscle memory.
Traveler Playbook: Execute With Precision
Before departure, confirm vaccines for the region: routine plus hepatitis A/B, typhoid and yellow fever where required. Validate medication legality; many countries restrict stimulant, opioid or certain anxiety medications. Pack a double supply split between carry-on and checked baggage with original labels and copies of prescriptions. Digitize your medical documents to a secure app.
On arrival, map out access to healthcare the same way you would map your way to coffee shops, restaurants or meeting sites. Identify a capable hospital within 30 minutes, save the local emergency number and test your unlocked phone or eSIM. Keep a small go-bag in the room — passport, means of payment, meds, assistance card — so you can depart quickly at any time of day or night, if needed. Share your itinerary with a trusted contact, enable phone location sharing for the trip and keep an eye on destination alerts through your assistance provider’s app.
Common Illnesses and Preventative Measures
International business and digital nomad life expose travelers to a wide range of predictable illnesses. Respiratory infections are common in planes, conferences, and coworking spaces, but good hygiene, adequate rest and masking in high-risk seasons can reduce exposure. Gastroenteritis and travelers’ diarrhea often result from poor sanitation. Using bottled or purified water, cooked foods and oral rehydration salts are essential safeguards. Jet lag can disrupt performance across time zones, but gradual sleep adjustments, hydration and light exposure help reset the body’s clock. Long flights also increase the risk of deep vein thrombosis, which can be prevented with periodic movement, calf exercises and compression socks when necessary.
Work-related stress is another frequent health challenge, leading to anxiety, headaches and weakened immunity. Managing it requires structured downtime, mindful caffeine use and short daily routines such as light exercise or breathing practices. Cardiovascular events remain a risk for traveling professionals, making medication adherence, hydration and balanced meals critical, with any chest pain requiring immediate care. Food allergies demand vigilance with translation cards and emergency medication, while conjunctivitis spreads easily in crowded spaces, best avoided with good hygiene and switching to glasses if irritation occurs.
Tropical and subtropical regions bring additional threats such as malaria, dengue, Zika, chikungunya and typhoid. Prevention relies on prophylaxis, repellents, protective clothing and vaccination against hepatitis A and B. Waterborne diseases can be avoided by sticking to sealed beverages and purified water, while heat-related illnesses require hydration, electrolyte replacement and awareness of heat stroke warning signs. Travelers should also avoid contact with stray animals due to rabies risk and take precautions against skin infections in humid climates by keeping skin dry, treating minor wounds promptly and wearing protective footwear.
Building Your Response Pathway
When a medical issue hits, you need a three-step flow you can follow half-asleep. First, stabilize and call the local emergency number for immediate, life-threatening events. Second, contact your assistance provider to coordinate care, confirm the right facility, arrange translation and start documentation. Third, notify your internal travel point of contact so leadership can support logistics and family communication. Keep digital health records ready to share. If you carry a satellite messenger for remote work, pre-program the emergency profile and practice sending a test check-in.
Extra Tip for Digital Nomads
Remote visas, slow-travel itineraries and budget stays change the calculus. Longer exposure increases cumulative risk of gastrointestinal illness, insect bites and heat stress. Vet co-working and co-living spaces for proximity to quality clinics. Consider regional evacuation thresholds—being 12 hours from a tertiary hospital reshapes decisions about fever or abdominal pain. Maintain a basic home medical kit at your hub with refills you can’t easily source abroad. For project teams traveling together, designate a medical lead and a rally point in each city.
The Global Rescue Connection
People traveling abroad for business need to tailor their precautions to the destination. That means staying current on required vaccinations, practicing good hygiene and taking preventive steps such as using mosquito repellent, drinking enough water and knowing where to access medical care in an emergency. Recognizing the health risks unique to each region is what makes preparation effective and travel safer. As face-to-face meetings replace many virtual ones, business professionals are heading to a wider variety of destinations, each with its own challenges. Preventing and managing the illnesses most commonly linked to international business travel requires advance planning and a thoughtful approach.
Traveling professionals should take time to research essential details about their destinations to keep trips running smoothly. One reliable tool is the Global Rescue Destination Report, which provides in-depth information on more than 200 countries and territories. These reports highlight cultural expectations, local laws, health concerns and security issues that can affect a traveler’s experience. Global Rescue, recognized worldwide for its expertise in travel risk management, offers these resources along with expert pre-travel planning, medical guidance and evacuation services. With clear insight before departure and responsive support in the field, Global Rescue enables business travelers to reduce risk, meet obligations and focus on their work with greater confidence.
(Lebanon, NH – October 29, 2025) Travel Weekly, the most influential B2B travel industry news resource, awarded Global Rescue two 2025 Magellan Awards. Global Rescue is the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services. The awards recognized its travel service solutions.
“With hundreds of entries from across the U.S. and around the world, the Magellan Award winners represent the best in the travel industry and salute the outstanding travel professionals behind it all. Each year, I think, ‘This will be the year to remember’ — the year that creativity, innovation and inspiration in the entries of the Travel Weekly Magellan Awards has peaked. Yet this year has topped all that has come before,” said Arnie Weissmann, editor-in-chief of Travel Weekly.
Magellan Gold was awarded to Global Rescue in the Travel Services Education/Training category for its Automated Partner Onboarding Campaign. “Global Rescue’s automated onboarding campaign transformed how new partners are trained, supported and activated. It replaced manual processes with a scalable, data-driven system. The result: higher engagement, improved retention and an increase in new partner growth,” said Samantha Hosking, the director of partner channel marketing. “By combining automation with intentional human touchpoints, Global Rescue has delivered a scalable, high-impact training solution. This approach elevates partner performance and internal efficiency alike,” she added.
Judges selected Global Rescue for a Silver Magellan Award in the Travel Services Marketing TV Commercial category. “In a world of fragmented media consumption, reaching our audience with the right message at the right moment required bold changes,” said Wil Klass, director of paid marketing. The “Global Rescue Protects You” [VIDEO] campaign marked a strategic shift into Connected TV (CTV) advertising. “Designed to reach high-intent travelers through on-demand streaming platforms, this campaign both looked good and performed well. It proved measurable success, driving revenue growth, expanding market presence and setting a new standard for how travel protection services engage modern audiences,” he added.
“It’s an honor to have our work recognized with two 2025 Magellan Awards. These awards celebrate innovation and excellence in travel services,” said Michael Holmes, vice president at Global Rescue. “These awards reflect our commitment to helping travelers explore the world with confidence, whether for adventure, leisure or business. Our global network of well-trained partners plays a vital role in every travel experience. Together, we empower people to travel boldly and enjoy the peace of mind that comes from knowing Global Rescue will be there whenever and wherever they need us,” he added.
About Global Rescue
Global Rescue is the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services to enterprises, governments and individuals. Founded in 2004, Global Rescue has exclusive relationships with the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations and Elite Medical Group. Global Rescue provides best-in-class services that identify, monitor and respond to client medical and security crises. The company has supported its clients—including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions—during every globally significant crisis of the past two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.
About the Magellan Awards
The Magellan Awards are judged and overseen by a one-of-a-kind panel of top travel professionals representing the best names and most accomplished leaders from the industry. In determining winners, entries do not compete with one another; instead, they are judged against a standard of excellence based on the long experience of Travel Weekly. To uphold this high standard of excellence, a category may have multiple winners or may have no winners at all.
About Travel Weekly
Travel Weekly is the most influential provider of news, research, opinion and analysis to the North American travel trade marketplace. It reaches a broad industry audience in print, online and with face-to-face events throughout the year. Travel Weekly is a part of Northstar Travel Group, the leading B-to-B media company providing information and marketing solutions for the global travel industry. Northstar Travel Group is based in Rutherford, NJ and more information is available at northstartravelgroup.com