February 15, 2023
Travelers are shrugging off inflation and getting back to domestic and international travel, according to the results of the Global Rescue Travel Survey. Despite inflation and the rising cost to travel, the majority of travelers (70%) have not canceled or postponed an international or domestic trip.
Travel increased significantly through November and December compared to the year before. Neither inflation nor airline flight disruptions are curbing travelers from returning to adventure, business and leisure travel.
“In the face of airline disruptions and the rising cost of travel, travelers are sticking with plans to travel,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue, the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services and a member of the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board at the U.S. Department of Commerce.
Global Rescue continues to answer the service needs of travelers – here and abroad – without any disruptions. In a typical one-month period, Global Rescue completes hundreds of operations in dozens of countries and principalities. Below are highlights from some of our most recent operations in various locations.
Long Line Rescue in Nepal
Needing a medical evacuation from challenging areas on Ama Dablam, like the Yellow and White Towers, often requires a long line rescue, a rapid rescue response used in remote, high-angle terrain. That was the situation for a Salvadoran mountaineer who was at Ama Dablam suffering from altitude sickness and internal bleeding. She was losing consciousness and was unable to walk. Sherpas from her climbing group contacted Global Rescue and a long line helicopter medical evacuation was ordered. The member was successfully airlifted to a hospital where she was examined and diagnosed with abnormal uterine bleeding, a cervical cyst, and hypothyroidism. The member was treated and Global Rescue medical operations continued to provide medical advisory services during her recovery.
Twisted Ankle in The United Kingdom
An Australian member traveling in London sustained an ankle injury. She was admitted to a local hospital and diagnosed with an ankle fracture and dislocation that would require surgery. Unfortunately, leg swelling forced the surgery to be postponed. The member elected to have her surgery. The treating team and Global Rescue’s physician concurred and ordered non-weight bearing on the leg, strict elevation and measures to diminish the risk of deep vein thrombosis during the journey home. Global Rescue membership services arranged for and paid for needed seating to meet the medical requirements, as well as coordinating ground transport, wheelchair assistance and porter service. The member arrived home safely to continue her medical care.

HAPE on Aconcagua
Aconcagua is the tallest mountain in South America and more than 3,500 people try to climb it each year. A U.S. member attempted to scale the 22,837 ft/6,706 m tall mountain but after suffering symptoms of HAPE he needed an airborne field rescue off the mountain. The member was successfully evacuated to a hospital where he was examined and diagnosed with possible fluid in the lungs. The member was not admitted to the hospital and, instead, was able to return to his home to follow up with his primary care physician.
Bowel Obstruction in Argentina
A bowel obstruction is uncomfortable and could be a sign of something more serious. So, when a U.S. member traveling in Argentina contacted Global Rescue complaining of a possible blocked bowel, he was advised to get urgent care if symptoms didn’t self-correct by the next day. Unfortunately, his condition worsened and he was evacuated to a hospital. Following an examination, his treating physician determined the member had a perforated small intestine and underwent emergency laparoscopic surgery to correct the issue. The member was discharged after a few days and returned home safely to continue his recovery.
Hiking Accident in The Rockies
An Australian member was hiking in Colorado when he suffered a broken thigh bone. After his hiking partner contacted Global Rescue, he was airlifted to safety and admitted into a trauma unit at a nearby hospital. Following an examination by the treating physician, the member underwent surgery to repair the bone. To continue his post-op recovery, the member needed to keep his healing leg fully extended and would require lie-flat seating for his return flight to his home country as well as wheelchair assistance through the flight itinerary. The member arrived home safely where he continues his recovery.
Snow Blind in Nepal
During a climbing trip on Mera Peak, Nepal a Singapore member became ill at High Camp. He reported body weakness, severe headache, difficulty breathing, an elevated heart rate and snow blindness. Global Rescue was contacted and a helicopter evacuation was initiated. The member was safely evacuated to a hospital in Kathmandu where he was evaluated and diagnosed with temporary snow blindness associated with High Altitude Cerebral Edema, which would resolve itself following his descent from the mountain.

Bad Fall Off a Rock in The USA
While traveling in Utah, an Australian member fell off a rock, suffering several injuries, including his legs. He was admitted to a trauma center in Salt Lake City and, following treatment for his injuries, he was transferred to a rehabilitation unit for a couple of weeks of physical therapy. He was deemed fit-to-fly provided he traveled on a lay-flat seat with a medical escort. Global Rescue medical operations concurred and arranged and paid for his air travel, lodging, ground transportation and wheelchair assistance through to his home in Sydney.
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Categories:
Missions & Member TestimonialsPlaces & PartnersFebruary 14, 2023
For someone who didn’t like the cold, Jamaican-born Rohan Freeman was an unlikely candidate to become the first African-American to complete the Seven Summits, the highest mountains on each of the continents. Freeman, an Outward Bound board member, didn’t even know he was the first African-American to complete the Seven Summits in 2012 until someone told him.
“It wasn’t anything I set out to do,” he said. “But it means a lot to me if my achievement motivates and inspires a more diverse group of climbers like Full Circle Expeditions, a group of all-black mountaineers who summited Mount Everest in May 2022.”
Freeman, an engineer, and his family came to the United States and settled in Connecticut. He didn’t like the cold and planned to re-settle in a warmer region. Who can blame him? Temperatures in Jamaica rarely go below 71 degrees F (21 degrees C) and Connecticut winter temperatures often dip into the low 20s (-6 degrees C). While he pictured himself on the beaches of California or Florida, his family had no plans to move.
So, Freeman committed to trying to find something to do during the cold, winter months – something more than going to work, the gym, the movies or simply staying indoors. “I was willing to give the cold weather one more shot.”

He decided to try snowboarding, an activity the brother of his then-girlfriend was doing. “I liked it so much, and I realized that if you’re dressed properly you can stay warm and enjoy outside cold weather sports,” he said.
Freeman, a longtime runner, moved from snowboarding to ice climbing. “I really liked that, too. So, I started snowshoeing and hiking.”
Soon after, his recreational running friends decided to climb Kilimanjaro – and they convinced Freeman to join. He didn’t prepare for the climb beyond his gym routine.
“I didn’t really care about mountaineering. I was going with friends. I didn’t do any special workouts for it. I just showed up thinking ‘how hard can it be to walk up the side of a mountain?’ I grew up doing that.”
The climb up Kilimanjaro (19,340 feet/5,895 meters) was not an endurance problem for Freeman, who has asthma, rather it was the altitude that was troublesome for him.
Nevertheless, he enjoyed it so much that he decided to climb more challenging mountains. He also decided to prepare more. After college graduation, his track competitions came to end. He didn’t have much going on athletically other than regular workouts at the gym – a routine that left him a bit bored and without any goals.
“I was just working out to work out.”

But, as his interest in climbing big mountains grew, he also ramped up his physical preparation and his knowledge about the sport.
“I didn’t know anything about mountaineering.”
He read several climbing books including “Into Thin Air” by Jon Krakauer and “The Seven Summits” by Frank Wells, Richard Bass, and Rick Ridgeway. After reading what he could, he became enamored with climbing Denali.
“I wondered if I could climb that mountain.”
He committed himself to gym exercises geared for rigorous mountaineering, spent time climbing in the White Mountains of New England for practice, and made certain to have medical evacuation protection with Global Rescue.
“I always have medical evacuation protection. When you’re doing what I do you’ve got to have that peace of mind protection if something goes wrong.”
He summited Denali successfully.
“I got hooked on climbing after that. The rest is history.”
Freeman’s climbing history would culminate in reaching the peaks of the Seven Summits, becoming the first African-American man and first Jamaican-born person to achieve that feat. But, Freeman points out, it wasn’t a goal, at least not at first.
“I didn’t start out wanting to climb the Seven Summits. To tell you truth, when I read ‘Into Thin Air’ and ‘Seven Summits’ I thought those guys are crazy, suicidal,” he said.
For Freeman, climbing was much more about the challenge of each mountain and not at all about peak-bagging. When he returned from his Denali summit another friend suggested going to Argentina to climb Aconcagua (22,837 feet/6,706 meters).
It ended up being the first time Freeman needed to turn back. He had HAPE, high-altitude pulmonary edema. “Walking myself out was one of the toughest experiences,” he said. The experience spurred Freeman to train more rigorously and to take high climbs more seriously.
“I really didn’t train that hard for Aconcagua. Coming off Denali I had too much confidence. So I trained harder, went back, and summited Aconcagua,” he said.
That’s when a third friend of his, who was attempting the Seven Summits, invited Freeman to join him in Russia to climb Mount Elbrus (18,510 feet/5,642 meters). They successfully summited and that’s when Freeman first contemplated climbing Mount Everest.
“I had never set my sights on it before,” he confessed. His contemplation of such an expedition took more than a year to evolve. Freeman found his interest in Mount Everest grow to the point of distraction.
“I started waking up in the middle of the night – with cold sweats – thinking about Mount Everest.”

He wrestled with his decision. On the one hand, he didn’t want to end up like so many of the people he read about – the ones who attempted Mount Everest and were injured or killed. But, on the other hand, the attraction to do it was powerful…even overwhelming.
“The pull was so strong that I couldn’t resist anymore.”
Freeman, an asthmatic, said Mount Everest was his most difficult climb because of the combination of the extreme altitude, his lung disease and the technical requirements for the ascent. Freeman managed his asthma by taking his time, especially at higher altitudes.
“I just have to go a little slower than everybody to give my lungs a chance to catch up to my legs.”
His first attempt to summit Mount Everest was unsuccessful but he went back a second time and succeeded, but not without a potentially expedition-ending incident.
Freeman was at Camp 3 on Mount Everest acclimatizing. “The sun was out and I left my tent without my sunglasses.”
His group started their scheduled descent as part of the acclimatization process but soon enough the bright, direct sunlight at the high altitude also reflecting off the snow burned Freeman’s retinas. He was snow blind, a painful eye condition caused by overexposure to the sun’s ultraviolet (UV) rays. It can happen in a matter of minutes.
“It was painful, my eyes were watering and my vision was blurred. I had to get myself down through the Khumbu Icefall to Base Camp to rest up and wait for my eyes to recover,” he said.
Following his successful summit of Mount Everest, Freeman had climbed five of the Seven Summits. It dawned on him to simply wrap it up and climb the final two mountains.
“I thought I may as well finish the final climbs and complete the Seven Summits.”
He did finish, after a decade of climbs, and only after he completed the majority of the climbs without any intention of a Seven Summit crown. Reflecting on the achievement, Freeman acknowledges the lesson in all of it comes down to perseverance.
“In my failures, like on Aconcagua and Mount Everest, are when I come back the strongest. I may not have been the strongest or smartest climber, but sheer determination can get you a long way. It did for me.”
Turning back and coming back. Those are essential beliefs Freeman holds.
“The mountain will be there tomorrow. I can always come back if I need to turn around short of a summit. I’m always taking inventory of my condition,” he said.
What’s next? Freeman is getting back to running and planning to complete a marathon on each of the seven continents and the two Poles.
“I have a lot more to accomplish, a much longer way to walk,” he said.
Lebanon, N.H. – February 13, 2023 – Traveler fears of COVID continue to plummet while concerns over civil unrest increase. The Global Rescue Winter 2023 Traveler Safety and Sentiment Survey revealed the greatest anxiety among the world’s most experienced travelers about international travel is having an injury or illness unrelated to COVID. The survey further uncovered a major shift in traveler worries about civil unrest and terrorism in international destinations.
Since August 2022, apprehension about COVID dramatically dropped at a rate of 61%, down to 13% compared to 33% in late summer, according to the results of the quarterly surveys. While COVID fears continue to plunge, other traveler reservations are rising. Traveler concerns about civil unrest and terrorism nearly doubled in the last six months, jumping to 14% in the latest survey from 8% in late summer 2022.
Today, more than a third of travelers (37%) said their biggest fear is suffering a non-COVID illness or injury, followed by civil unrest (14%), trip cancellation (12%), being robbed (4%), natural disasters (3%) and nuclear attack (less than 1%).
When it comes to traveling internationally there are other concerns travelers have that, while less severe than illness or injury, are nevertheless worrisome, especially as travel returns to pre-pandemic levels but staffing shortages within the travel industry persist. Nearly a quarter (23%) of survey respondents said hotel and lodging safety was most important, while 10% worry about car service and taxi safety. Some want to know if the destination is safe for families (15%) or women (11%) to travel. Ten percent want to know if they’ll need physical protection. Identity theft and cyber security remain important concerns with 9% of respondents. Less than 3% worry about automobile rental safety or environmental safety.
“Traveler confidence is skyrocketing and they are mitigating their worries by safeguarding their trips and safety with more protections,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue. “Whether it’s flight disruptions, war, natural disaster, or a pandemic, the new normal for travelers includes travel protection for emergency medical services and evacuation. Travel protection services are no longer a take-it-or-leave-it option. We are forecasting significant increases in demand for travel protection services,” Richards said.
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Contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or 202.560.1195 (phone/text) for more information.
About the Global Rescue Traveler Sentiment and Safety Survey
Global Rescue, the leading travel risk and crisis response provider, conducted a survey of more than 2,000 of its current and former members between January 30 and February 4, 2023. The respondents exposed a range of behaviors, attitudes and preferences regarding international and domestic travel.
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. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.
Categories:
Places & PartnersTravelFebruary 10, 2023
Putting pen to paper on a travel bucket list might feel like a daunting task—especially if you want to create an achievable one. It’s easy enough to dream about summiting Mount Everest, walking the Great Wall of China and scuba diving Belize’s Great Blue Hole, but is it something you will do?
How can you make a bucket list that is more than a list of pipe dreams? What tricks and tips can you follow so your bucket list is something you return to time after time to check off items you’ve completed and to add new aspirations, too?
We’ve got some guidance to help get you started, so get out your pen and paper and start turning your dreams into travel action.

Tips for creating an achievable travel bucket list
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Start small. The problem with most bucket lists is that they are time bound only by “before you die.” For many, this is too broad a margin to complete the list. You will always feel like you have more time and will put things off. But the reality is that many bucket list items will need to be completed when you are healthy enough to have the energy for the trip. We suggest making annual bucket lists—or at the most five years—so you are more accountable to a specific time frame.
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Get your friends and family involved. Don’t keep your bucket list a secret. As you create it, involve friends and family who can cheer you on, keep you accountable and go with you. Unless one of your bucket list items includes solo travel (check out some tips for female solo travel here!), getting family and friends to buy in is crucial since they may come with you.
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Identify goals and then destinations. Putting your goals ahead of destinations can be a helpful way to stay in your budget, making your bucket list easier to complete. For example, if you want to go to a tropical beach, you don’t need to fly to Fiji. Try the Bahamas instead and save big bucks on airfare.
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Stay realistic. What can you achieve at this time given your budget, the age of your children and your vocation? These factors can be limiting, and making a bucket list that is outside your means or opportunity can be discouraging.
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Make incremental buckets. If you do want to summit Mount Everest or dive the Great Blue Hole what are you doing to prepare? Your annual bucket list could include milestones that will help you prepare for your ultimate bucket list items down the road. Start off on smaller, less technical mountains and shallower, less challenging dive locations and work your way up to the more advanced ones. Practice and experience are keys to achieving most adventurous bucket list activities.
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Don’t let guilt be a motivator. Fill your list with items that inspire excitement and joy, rather than guilt. “Should” items are easier to ignore than “want to” items because their aim is not fulfillment.

The Practical Dos and Don’ts of Bucket List Travel
Got your bucket list? Gather your family or friends, your calendar and your credit card, and start booking!
But as you do, keep in mind these important dos and don’ts of bucket list travel. There’s no doubt your travel bucket list will take you to places you’ve never been. Being prepared can make the trip go more smoothly, giving you that bucket list experience you’ve dreamed of.
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DO research the latest current events in your destination. This will help you avoid tricky situations, like simmering political unrest and travel disruptions and restrictions due to strikes, disease outbreaks or terrorism. DON’T get caught unaware in a new location.
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DO stay within your budget. If you have to break the bank to check off an item on your bucket list, should it be there? DON’T go into debt over your bucket list. Read here for budget-friendly travel tips.
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DO research local accommodations and prepare accordingly. If you’re going off the grid, this is especially important. “Anytime I’m considering going to a remote area, the first thing I’m doing is a weather and terrain analysis of the location,” said Jeff Weinstein, a paramedic and a medical operations associate manager for Global Rescue. “Can you bring a vehicle right up to the site? Do you have to hike in and what is that hike like? What is the closest city? Closest hospital? What are the roads like?”
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DON’T rely on others to think through things for you, especially with off-the-grid travel. Read more tips for going off the grid here.
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DO prepare for the local cultural norms including dress codes, public displays of affection, and common U.S. hand gestures, like “thumbs up” and the “peace sign” which are offensive in other destinations. DON’T assume other cultures share your values, especially around dress. This could draw unwanted attention.
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DO talk to those who have gone before you. DON’T try to figure it all out on your own. Global Rescue members can obtain free destination reports to help guide travel decisions. Read experts’ top travel mistakes here.
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DO Research local medical care and the healthcare infrastructure. Before you leave, know what type of medical care is available at your destination. DON’T assume standards of medical care are the same. Read tips for traveling in the post-pandemic world here.
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DO sign up for Global Rescue Membership before you leave. Even the best-laid plans can be foiled by sickness or injury. Our on-staff medical team can help diagnose you via telemedicine and connect you with the best local medical care. If you need to fly back home for care, we will arrange it. If political unrest or an injury requires a sudden evacuation, we’re there for you. DON’T travel without the peace of mind that comes from a Global Rescue membership.
The funny thing about a travel bucket list is that the more you travel, the bigger your list gets. So see your annual bucket list as a launching point to greater adventures.
Good luck!
Categories:
NewsFebruary 3, 2023
Categories:
NewsFebruary 2, 2023
January 25, 2023
Article Highlights
- Proactive Protection: Executive protection focuses on avoiding crises through advanced planning, unlike reactive bodyguards.
- Beyond Wealth: It’s crucial for anyone in high-risk environments, not just the wealthy, with a focus on safety and productivity.
- Comprehensive Planning: Includes pre-travel prep, vetted local drivers, and tailored procedures for seamless, secure trips.
It Can Be a Dangerous World
The world can feel like a dangerous place. Whether it’s a deadly kidnapping in Nigeria, an abduction in Mexico, or a hostage-taking in Brazil, the political unrest and high-profile kidnappings that occupy front page news make it easy to feel vulnerable when traveling. It’s also compelling many business leaders to consider executive protection.
The Importance of Executive Protection
When planning an international business trip, having an extra level of security is an appropriate standard to meet your duty of care obligation,” said Harding Bush, a former Navy SEAL and senior manager for security operations at Global Rescue. “But what we think might keep us safe could put business travelers at higher risk unless you separate the myths from the facts about executive protection security details and bodyguards.”
MYTH: Bodyguards are the same thing as executive protection
FACT: Bodyguards are reactive to emergencies, and executive protection is proactive to emergencies. A bodyguard provides a deterrent to threat through its physical presence. Bodyguards may not be aware of impending threats or their clients’ vulnerability and cannot effectively avoid danger – defeating the very purpose of security. Responding at the time of an emergency is too late; all business objectives will be lost as the crisis becomes the immediate priority.
“Executive Protection security details prepare and plan extensively before accompanying clients during travel,” said Bush who, while on active duty with the Navy SEALS, was a leader for the security detail for the Iraqi Interim Prime Minister and has provided private executive protection throughout the world.
The Structure of an Executive Protection Detail
The executive protection detail consists of two elements; an advance element and the close protection element-or main body. The advance element travel ahead of the main body that travels with the client being protected.
The advance provides risk mitigation to everything from the planned primary and alternate routes to the physical safety of the visited locations and facilities; they prepare for the safe arrival of the client and main element of the executive protection detail – this efficiency increases overall safety by boosting the level of awareness, giving the security detail and the client the capability to avoid any escalating security situation.
The close protection element’s main role is to directly accompany and transport the protected persons in order to recognize and avoid any direct threats – and keeping those protected from harm by quickly evacuating from a sudden crisis.

MYTH: The purpose of a security detail is to keep you safe should a crisis occur.
FACT: The purpose of a security detail is to avoid crises. “A security detail is inherently proactive, meaning that it travels ahead of your team to evaluate the level of security of your destination and, if necessary, change plans. Of course, they can also respond to crises, but avoidance is the top goal,” said Bush, an expert in high-risk travel, cultural awareness, crisis preparedness, leadership and operational planning.
MYTH: Only very wealthy people need executive protection.
FACT: While high net-worth individuals are inherently vulnerable to various criminal threats, additional factors other than wealth may require support through executive protection. Some of these factors include the geopolitical environment at the travel location, the reliability of local infrastructure and law enforcement capabilities. “Employees of large wealthy organizations may be targeted during travel to exploit or leverage the organization. Persons who are citizens of specific countries may also find themselves more vulnerable while traveling abroad,” Bush said.
MYTH: Having an executive protection security detail makes it safe to travel to unsafe places.
FACT: Even with an expert security detail, safety cannot be guaranteed. If the risk level of a destination requires a security detail, the traveler or their organization should consider if there are alternative options for reaching the same business objectives. This requires pre-travel planning, where the level of risk is analyzed and matched with the organization’s or travelers’ tolerance level for risk. While planning, the traveler should closely consider the balance between productivity and safety. “Executive protection can make you safer, but it never eliminates all risks,” Bush said. If the trip is imperative, however, having an executive protection security detail can significantly alleviate stress for a traveling executive, allowing them to focus on the business task at hand.
MYTH: An armed security detail is safer than an unarmed detail.
FACT: Firearms are just one of the many tools used by an executive protection detail to mitigate risk, and they are not always a requirement. An armed security detail provides an enhanced level of deterrence and can save lives in an emergency. The crime level of a location is usually the determining factor in whether firearms are required. “If weapons are used, then all business objectives are immediately lost,” Bush said.
MYTH: Clients do not need training to use executive protection; they just need to follow instructions.
FACT: You must prepare your client, whether an executive, a scientist, an engineer, or anyone else. CSO Online states, “Teaching the executive how to remain safe, emergency procedures, expectations from the security detail, and familiarization with protocols can be a tremendous asset in an emergency.”
The executives and their staff should communicate closely and often with the security detail leadership. Executive protection professionals understand that plans and requirements can suddenly change and have the ability to adapt a safe plan with contingencies “on the fly.” The more information about the executives’ intentions, the more the executive protection professional can reduce the level of risk.
Depending on the level of risk, traveling with a security detail can feel constraining, but it’s important for everyone’s safety that your team is ready to follow the procedures set in place by the security provider. These procedures will increase safety and productivity, allowing business objectives to be met in a challenging, remote and austere location.
Additional Tips for Executive Protection
Security details are not cheap, but pricing will vary depending on your destination. According to DMAC Security, you could pay around $1000 per 8-hour day per executive protection professional and about the same for each required vehicle and driver.
Armored vehicles provide additional protection should you encounter local instability while on the road, like a riot, which can happen suddenly. Armored vehicles can also reduce the risk of injuries during a vehicle accident. Armored vehicles are regularly provided through the executive protection details.
Driving a vehicle in a foreign country is a high-risk activity. 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. Make sure your driver is well-vetted and trained in security driving techniques. The driver should always remain on-site or very close by to provide the ability to separate from the consequences of an escalating incident. The driver’s responsibility is driving. A separate professional should provide the executive protection that accompanies the executive.
The Success of a Security Detail
“As a veteran of hundreds of security details that include dropping into a country ahead of time, assessing area security, establishing relationships on the ground, and executing the entire operation, I know the best security detail will avoid crises and, if necessary, respond if something happens,” Bush said. “But the real success is in a smooth, safe trip, where all threats have been avoided, so business proceeds uninterrupted,” he added.
Ready To Set Up Your Security Detail?
With Global Rescue, you will have an unbeatable security partner to help you prepare before your trip and guide you on the ground once you arrive. We drop into the country ahead of time, assess the security of the area and establish relationships on the ground to ensure your detail is ready for your arrival. Our security partnerships all over the world make for seamless preparation that extends upon your arrival, when we can be the liaison between you and the local security company. That way, safety is not a concern for your executives, and they can focus on their work.
“Remember, the purpose of a security detail is to avoid crises,” Bush said. “Of course, it’s helpful to have security in case something happens, but the real success is in a smooth, safe trip, where all threats have been avoided.”
LEBANON, N.H. (Jan. 24, 2023) – U.S. Alpine Ski Team athlete Mikaela Shiffrin secured her 83rd FIS World Cup win in Italy to become the winningest female skier of all time.
“Congratulations to the Greatest Of All Time, Mikaela Shiffrin. She is an incredibly talented, mentally resilient athlete in a highly competitive global sport. Winning her 83rd World Cup race is a spectacular achievement,” said Dan Richards, the CEO of Global Rescue, the company providing emergency and crisis support since 2006 for the U.S. Ski & Snowboard team in the event of illness or injury among any of the team members.
Shiffrin’s win elevates her past the previous record holder, American skier Lindsey Vonn, and moves her within three victories of Ingemar Stenmark’s record of 86 World Cup wins.
“Mikaela Shiffrin is now not only the best woman alpine skier of all time, but she is also a great person, teammate and role model for the sport of alpine skiing,” said Sophie Goldschmidt, CEO of U.S. Ski & Snowboard. “As an organization, we are so proud of her accomplishments and cannot wait to see how she further transforms the sport and the history books next.”
Shiffrin admitted she was nervous before her run, but her anxiety washed away once it was time to go. “Everything went quiet and I just pushed as hard as I could at every turn. It’s still hard for me to believe that I have the mental focus again to be strong on the second run. It’s something I don’t take for granted.”
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For more information contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or +1 (202) 560.1195.
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. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.
Categories:
Health & SafetyTravelJanuary 19, 2023
A mountaineering doctor from Utah pleaded guilty to calling in a false report of hypothermia after attempting and failing to summit Denali so he could be “rescued” by helicopter instead of descending on his own, according to a criminal complaint filed in Fairbanks, Alaska federal court. The doctor has been banned from Denali (20,310 ft/6,190 m), the tallest peak in North America, for five Years and ordered to pay a $10,000 penalty.
The issue of some mountaineers, perhaps with less experience or training, becoming more reliant on chopper rescues was noted as early as 2012 by Nick Heil who wrote that mountaineers worry that the presence of the [rescue helicopters] alters expedition decision making and encourages climbers to push beyond their limits.
There has been some chatter during some recent climbing seasons in the Himalayan, Karakorum and Hindu Kush mountain ranges about climbers calling for a helicopter rescue when they are struggling. Climbing legend Ed Viesturs said there have been numerous cases recently where climbers fake an illness or demand to be flown off just to get home sooner.

“It seems that being able to talk about your summit is more important than embracing the process,” he said.
Climbing expert Alan Arnette says the mountaineering situation is changing, and not necessarily for the best. “High-altitude mountaineering has always had risks. Climbers can mitigate these risks by arriving at their expedition well prepared and self-sufficient as possible,” he said. But, he adds, in today’s environment, climbers are often told if they get in trouble, their rescue insurance will cover an evacuation off the mountain.
“This false sense of security is dangerous. Telling someone what they want to hear is never acceptable,” said Arnette, a mountaineer who summited Mount Everest in 2011 and became the oldest American to summit K2 in 2014. He is one of the world’s most respected chroniclers of mountaineering according to Outside Magazine.
Viesturs, a member of the Global Rescue Mountain Advisory Council and the only American to have climbed all 14 of the world’s 8,000+ meter peaks, and the fifth person to do so without using supplemental oxygen, concurs.
“I’ve always believed climbing a mountain has to be a round trip. The second half of any climb, the descent, is the most important part of the actual event. If you don’t have the strength, endurance, desire or motivation to descend the entire way from the summit, back to basecamp, then perhaps you should rethink your reasons for climbing, or your system of training for such an endurance event,” Viesturs said.
Conrad Anker, who summited Mount Everest twice, said “The old-school thing was, you were self-sufficient. If an accident did happen, you would have the wherewithal to extract yourself and your teammates.”

Other climbers are concerned the climbing process is being diluted. Global Rescue’s Mountain Advisory Council member and world-famous high-altitude climber Nirmal “Nims” Purja broke more records during the 2022 Himalayas spring climbing season. The Nepali mountaineer has a firm belief about summit etiquette.
“When I do a summit push, it is from Base Camp to the summit and then from the summit back to Base Camp,” Purja said. “For me that’s the only way to do it. It has to be authentic – no helicopter lifts back to Base Camp – unless the summit is void or there’s an emergency situation or rescue and someone needs a helicopter.”

So, when does a summit count? The summit of a mountain is its topmost level attainable, the peak, the highest point. Simple, right?
Not so fast.
Getting to the top is optional, getting down is mandatory. “Climbers must plan their descent whether it’s their return or their exit strategy, even before planning the ascent. The latter depends on the former. Prioritize safety over success. Prepare yourself physically before a climb for a long-term, demanding event, and you’ll be faster and stronger and therefore safer,” Viesturs said.
“At the end of the day, it’s kind of lame to call in a chopper halfway down a mountain when you’re not seriously injured or ill, simply to avoid the last part of the descent,” he said.
Gordon Janow, who has led expeditions to each of the highest mountains on the seven traditional continents and is the director of programs for Alpine Ascents, said “turning around early, before a medical emergency arises, is just smart mountaineering.”
Tom Livingstone, an acclaimed outdoor writer and climber, said his journeys in the mountains start and end at Base Camp.

“I climb with the intention of staying safe and not needing a helicopter rescue. I don’t believe an ascent is valid if a helicopter is used whilst in the mountains – and an ascent must finish with the whole team safely back at Base Camp,” he said.
Biden Administration pushes court to restore traveler mask mandate.
Lebanon, NH – January 17, 2023 – Travel industry leaders strongly oppose the Biden Administration’s decision to fight to keep a mask mandate in place. The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals will hear arguments on Tuesday from the Biden Justice Department on behalf of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to reinstate a mask mandate for air travel, after a federal judge in Florida struck down the mandate last April, according to news reports.
“The decision by the Department of Justice to fight to reinstate the mask mandate is not medically indicated and it contradicts President Biden’s declaration in September that the pandemic is over,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue, the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services and a member of the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board at the U.S. Department of Commerce.
“It is a reckless, unnecessary action that will spread traveler fear and uncertainty further damaging an industry badly ravaged by the pandemic,” Richards said.
The fight to keep mask mandates is not a popular one among travel industry groups. The U.S. Travel Association, for example, praised the elimination of the mask mandate. “The current decision to halt enforcement of the federal mask mandate effectively returns the choice of mask usage on planes and other forms of public transportation to travelers and travel industry workers, a further step toward endemic management of COVID,” Tori Emerson Barnes, the association’s executive vice president, said at the time.
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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. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com
The World’s Most Experienced Travelers Name the Top 25 Travel Songs
Lebanon, N.H. – January 14, 2023 – As travelers shrug off inflation and emerge from holiday travel disruptions, people are searching international trips in droves, according to a recent report. Global Rescue conducted a survey of the world’s most experienced travelers to identify a collection of the best travel songs to inspire trip-takers.
“Travel confidence is exploding in a positive direction. TSA data reflects traveler volumes pushing past pre-pandemic levels for the first time in more than two years. Call it revenge travel or make-up travel, the comeback to international travel is surging,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue, the world’s leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services and a member of the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board at the U.S. Department of Commerce.
“People are gearing up for a return to travel after the pandemic pause. They are driving a significant rebound in travel activity and the Global Rescue survey revealed the Top 25 travel songs that inspire adventure, encourage exploration, and re-connect us with loved ones,” Richards said.
Eddie Money’s “Two Tickets to Paradise” was identified as the favorite travel song followed by:
- Dancing Queen by ABBA
- Ain’t No Sunshine by Bill Withers
- Caribbean Queen by Billie Ocean
- Three Little Birds by Bob Marley
- Saturday in the Park by Chicago
- Teach Your Children by CSNY
- Wagon Wheel by Darius Rucker
- Already Gone by Eagles
- Rocket Man by Elton John
- Lose Yourself by Eminem
- Autumn Leaves by Eric Clapton
- Fly Me to the Moon by Frank Sinatra
- I Got Your (I Feel Good) by James Brown
- Don’t Stop Believin’ by Journey
- Free Bird by Lynyrd Skynyrd
- Nothing Else Matters by Metallica
- Burn it to the Ground by Nickelback
- I’m Leavin’ on a Jet Plane by Peter, Paul and Mary
- Timber by Pitbull
- Bohemian Rapsody by Queen
- Born to Be Wild by Steppenwolf
- Don’t You Worry About a Thing by Stevie Wonder
- Burning Down the House by Talking Heads
- Brown Eyed Girl by Van Morrison
The complete collection of The Global Rescue Top Travel Songs is available on Spotify.
About the Global Rescue Traveler Sentiment and Safety Survey
Global Rescue, the leading travel risk and crisis response provider, conducted a survey of more than 1,000 of its current and former members between October 25 and 31, 2022. The respondents exposed a range of behaviors, attitudes and preferences regarding international and domestic travel.
Contact Bill McIntyre at bmcintyre@globalrescue.com or 202.560.1195 (phone/text) for more information.
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. Global Rescue has provided medical and security support to its clients, including Fortune 500 companies, governments and academic institutions, during every globally significant crisis of the last two decades. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.