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Is It Safe to Go to Sporting Events?

Although many venues are relaxing their COVID restrictions, there are still precautions you can take to minimize your risk at these venues, especially if you’re planning a special trip around a sporting event. 

Although many venues are relaxing their COVID restrictions, there are still precautions you can take to minimize your risk at these venues, especially if you’re planning a special trip around a sporting event. 


Considering traveling to a spring or summer sporting event this year? You’re not the only one: Many people are looking to make up for long-lost lost travel time — and that includes travel to major sporting events.

As more and more sporting events relax COVID restrictions with regard to capacity limits and masking requirements, it seems as if we’re finally returning to a pre-pandemic normal. But there are steps you should still take to minimize your risk at these venues, usually known for boisterous spectators sitting shoulder to shoulder. After all, the only thing you want to be catching is a fly ball.

Whether its Monaco Grand Prix in May, London’s Wimbledon in June, The Tour de France in July, The British open in Scotland in July or another spectacle closer to home, here’s what you should consider from a health safety perspective.

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Are Sporting Events Safe From COVID-19?

Is any place officially safe from COVID-19? No. So don’t expect your chances of contracting COVID-19 at a sporting event — whether outdoor or indoor — being zero, either.

Even if you’re physically distanced, the fact that you’re potentially near other screaming fans can reduce the safety margin. Even when socially distanced, it can be a good idea to still wear a mask. “If it’s an indoor event, masks are highly recommended if you are concerned about COVID infection,” said David Koo, associate director of operations at Global Rescue.

[Related Reading: Crowd Safety Tips]

Is It Safe to Go If I’m Fully Vaccinated or Have Previously Been Infected?

“Vaccines are an important tool to help reduce the risk of infection and severe complications of COVID, regardless of which variant,” Koo said.

“We recommend anyone going to sporting events be fully vaccinated and/or recovered from COVID,” he added. Some countries mandate full vaccinations and will not accept proof of previous infection and recovery to attend these events, so it’s important attendees check with the event organizers ahead of time.

If you are immunocompromised, you should weigh the risks of spending time in crowds – sporting events included.

What Should I Consider Before Attending?

Before you storm the stadium, arena, speedway or track, here are a few aspects to pay close attention to ahead of time:

  • Is it indoors or out? Outdoor events are less likely to lead to infection because the air circulation is greater.
  • Research the safety measures being followed by the event organizers as they will all be different. Are they still enforcing social distancing or requiring masks? Do they require attendees to show proof of vaccination?
  • Do they accept cancellation and refunds? Particularly if you test positive for COVID-19 or come into close contact with a COVID-19-positive individual and can longer attend the event.

123 tennis stadium in Rome

What Else Can I Do to Reduce My Risk/Protect Others?

“The first and best line of defense: be fully vaccinated or fully recovered from a previous infection,” Koo said. Other steps include:

  • Pay attention to the level of COVID cases where you plan on traveling. The incidence could be high, and that should factor into your decision about attending a game there.
  • Take an at-home COVID test the day of the game if you feel unwell, even if the symptoms are mild, such as a scratchy throat. If you test positive, quarantine for five days.
  • Wear a well-fitted N95/KN95 mask or respirator when attending the event, and brush up on the CDC’s latest masking tips to ensure a proper fit.
  • Choose a seat away from a crowded section, if possible, or aim for at least one to two seats apart. Carry alcohol-based hand sanitizer and use frequently. According to the CDC, effective hand sanitizer is at least 60% alcohol.

[Related Reading: Coronavirus Travel Kit]

Get Global Rescue

In an increasingly challenging world, Global Rescue makes travel possible. Never has that been truer than in the age of COVID-19. Unlike other travel protection companies, our services are always available to handle COVID-19 cases. Curious about the terms? Review our Member Service Agreement: we do not make any distinctions between COVID-19 and other infectious diseases with respect to our services.

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Global Rescue Deploys Medical Operations Team to Mount Everest

Record-breaking rescues expected as pandemic abates and climbers crowd into Nepal.  Lebanon, N.H. – May 10, 2022 – Global Rescue, the leading provider of medical evacuation services, is deploying an emergency medical operations team to…

Record-breaking rescues expected as pandemic abates and climbers crowd into Nepal.

 Lebanon, N.H. – May 10, 2022 – Global Rescue, the leading provider of medical evacuation services, is deploying an emergency medical operations team to Nepal in anticipation of a Mount Everest spring climbing season with a higher number of emergency medical rescues. 

  “We anticipate a record number of mountaineers crowding into Nepal to climb Mount Everest and trek the Himalayas, and that means a concurrent likelihood of a record number of emergency medical rescue operations,” said Dan Richards Global Rescue’s CEO and a global member of the World Travel and Tourism Council.  

 Whenever high-altitude trekkers and mountaineers convene for high-risk, life-changing ascents, Global Rescue medical operations experts deploy to the region to help save lives.  

 “We will have boots on the ground to support medical operations, logistical and emotional support. People traveling to the Himalayas to climb and trek are in unfamiliar circumstances, and we help when they are in trouble,” said David Koo, a former combat medic and the associate director of operations for Global Rescue.We deploy anytime it’s a primary activity area, where we have a lot of members taking part in extreme activities. We have lots of assistance in medical support wherever we deploy. 

 For more than two years, the coronavirus pandemic disrupted international mountaineering, closing or limiting access to popular, challenging mountains worldwide. It’s unclear what COVID-19 or its variants will mean for the 2022 spring climbing season. But experts are making predictions based on their experience and observations.  

 “Last year, Mount Everest hit record permit numbers but it happened very late,” said Dan Stretch, operations manager for Global Rescue and a veteran of deployments to Nepal during the climbing seasons. “This year, like most things, the number of people embarking on high climbs in the Himalayas is still unclear.” 

 Legendary high-climber and a member of the Global Rescue Mountain Advisory Council, Ed Viesturs, suggests Nepal will be extra crowded. “There won’t be any climbing access from the China side. It’ll be interesting to see what countries like Nepal and Pakistan require for entry,” he said. 

 Providing nonstop, 24/7 medical emergency support for a massive number of people taking part in extreme, high-altitude activities is not for the faint of heart.  

 We are flexible and physically fit in order to be efficient on the ground. We constantly research the area and the resources available. We stay close to the airport to coordinate and be part of airborne transports. Unexpected weather plays a big role. We make certain to have a plan B that includes a sleeping bag, portable oxygen canisters and special highaltitude equipment when we pack in case we have to overnight on the mountain at Mount Everest Base Camp (17,598 feet/5,364 meters) to support emergency rescue operations,” Koo said. 

 The Global Rescue deployment team remains on-site for the duration of the two-month climbing season. The days are long, often lasting up to 16 hours 

 “We are active from sunrise to sundown. If there are no ongoing rescues, that’s when we follow up with rescued members, check on their care, complete administrative requirements and rest up. Each deployed team member has at least one day a week to chill out, get a massage, go sightseeing, do anything to rest, recuperate and prepare for the next few days,” Koo said.  

Global Rescue is the leading emergency rescue resource for mountaineers, climbers and those who love the mountains. The Global Rescue Mountain Advisory Council helps keep services at peak level. The Mountain Advisory Council is led by Viesturs, world-famous high-altitude climber Nirmal “Nims” Purja, outdoor adventure safety expert and longtime mountaineering author Jed Williamson, Global Rescue’s Koo and Stretch. 

Additional Mountain Advisory Council members include:   

  • Wilderness and altitude sickness expert Dr. Eric Johnson is a Global Rescue associate medical director, past president of the Wilderness Medical Society and member of the Board of Directors of the Himalaya Rescue Association. Johnson is also one of the founders of Everest ER. 
  • Special operations and critical planning authority Scott Hume is Global Rescue’s vice president operations and the former Chief Operations Officer of the 3rd Brigade 25th Infantry Division.   
  • Former Navy SEAL and manager of Global Rescue Security Operations Harding Bush has extensive mountain and cold weather operations expertise. He has developed multiple training programs for ski mountaineering and cold weather survival. He is a graduate of several U.S. and NATO Mountaineering courses including the Slovenian Mountain Warfare School. 

Stretch predicts that 2022 will be wide open on Mount Everest. “If 2021 is anything to go by, there won’t be any limitations on group size. Expect record permits distributed with no enforced rules. Climbers should go with expedition organizers who take COVID-19 precautions seriously,” he said.  

Koo and his deployment team are taking it all in stride. We are comfortable in Nepal. Our partners are super nice. It’s like a second home. 

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.  

 

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How to Survive Animal Attacks

A recent grizzly bear attack in Montana has spring hikers and campers worried about wild animal encounters. Global Rescue has seen a variety of illnesses and injuries — many the result of a wild animal…

A recent grizzly bear attack in Montana has spring hikers and campers worried about wild animal encounters. Global Rescue has seen a variety of illnesses and injuries — many the result of a wild animal encounter — and offers prevention and safety advice.


TL;DR

• Spring brings increased risk of animal encounters, including bears, dogs, and snakes.
• Avoid contact with wild animals and follow local regulations.
• Seek immediate medical attention for bites and stings.
• Wear protective clothing and use repellent to prevent insect bites.
• Consider travel protection membership for safety and emergency assistance.

Understanding Bear Activity in Spring

When the snow begins to melt in spring, bears start to rouse from hibernation. And, according to the National Park Service, they are hungry and immediately begin searching for food.

If you are hiking or camping this spring, you’ll want to steer clear of bears. A hiker in Montana wasn’t so lucky when he came upon a grizzly bear. Global Rescue, the pioneer of worldwide field rescue, has seen a variety of illnesses and injuries — many the result of a wild animal encounter.

Here in the United States, bites from dogs, kicks from farm animals, and stings from bees, wasps and hornets continue to represent the most danger to humans, according to a study in Wilderness & Environmental Medicine, but, when you are traveling abroad, you may encounter rabid dogs, infected mosquitos or angry wildlife.

A banner with a rescue helicopter highlighting how traditional travel insurance won't rescue you from the point of injury or illness.

“The best way to survive an animal attack is to avoid them, just like an avalanche or even terrorist attack,” says Harding Bush, manager of operations at Global Rescue. “Travelers need to be aware of areas and times or seasons when dangerous animal activity occurs and plan your activity around those facts. Many locations, including National State Parks, have laws and regulations about traveling into animal territory.”

Tips for Specific Animal Encounters

Despite best efforts, an encounter may happen. If it does, here are a few animal attack stories from Global Rescue members — and some tips to keep you safe during your outdoor adventures.

Dog Bites

Global Rescue member Tenn Nelson was traveling in India when he was bitten by a wild dog. He had traveled to India the year before, but hadn’t received a rabies vaccination along with his other shots. His mother, Beth, called Global Rescue. Global Rescue advised Tenn on how to obtain the medicine he needed and how to seek assistance at a local clinic to administer treatment.

  • Dogs are the main source of human rabies deaths, contributing up to 99% of all rabies transmissions to humans.
  • “As a rule, travelers should presume all stray animals, who are naturally unpredictable and likely carriers of infectious disease, including rabies,” said David Koo, associate director of operations at Global Rescue. “Avoid contact with them and maintain a safe distance.”

Learn more about staying safe around stray animals while traveling.

Snake Bites

A small king cobra curled up on a tree branch, blending into its surroundings with its striking scales.
A tiny King Cobra gracefully coiled on a tree branch.

If you’re an outdoor enthusiast, you’ve probably come across a snake before. And, hopefully, you successfully avoided it. According to the World Health Organization, an estimated 5.4 million people are bitten each year with up to 2.7 million envenomings. Approximately 81,000 to 138,000 people die each year because of snake bites, and around three times as many amputations and other permanent disabilities are caused by snakebites annually.

  • “Rural areas lacking appropriate medical care and quick access to anti-venom contribute to the high number of snakebite fatalities,” Koo said.
  • Global Rescue conducted a medical evacuation for a member bitten by an African cobra in Namibia, and offers these snakebite treatment suggestions.

Insect Bites

Mosquitoes carry many types of diseases such as Malaria, Zika and Dengue, to name a few. Infected mosquitoes can pass these diseases to humans through their bite. When you are far away from home, the best course of action is to prevent the bite in the first place.

  • “You can minimize the chance of mosquito bites by wearing long-sleeved shirts, long pants and socks; use EPA-registered insect repellent; and cover sleeping areas with mosquito nettings,” Koo said.
  • Global Rescue offers tips for Malaria and Zika prevention.

Spider Bites

Other insects can be dangerous, too. Global Rescue member Linda Hanks suspected she was bitten by a brown recluse spider and used the Global Rescue Mobile App to request a TotalCare urgent consult. Within 10 minutes, a physician from the Elite Medical Group confirmed the diagnosis and provided Hanks with home remedies.

Wildlife Encounters

A cape buffalo standing in the hazy Savannah grasslands of Africa.
A cape buffalo stands in the African Savannah.

Global Rescue member Angie Heister was gored by a male Cape buffalo while walking through the Tsitsingombe River Valley in Zimbabwe. A giraffe stampeded Global Rescue Members Daniel and Laura Core while driving to their hotel inside Zimbabwe’s Mosi-oa-Tunya National Park.

Wild animals are unpredictable, and the results can be devastating. Always listen to your guide (both members did) and respect the wildlife, no matter what country you are visiting. Our friends at OutdoorLife magazine also have some great advice on how to survive wild animal attacks. If bears are your concern this season, the

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A Day in the Life Protecting Mount Everest Climbers

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Travelers Will Spend More Time and Money on Travel In 2022 

Major Shift in Comfort Levels for Cruises  Lebanon, N.H. – May 9, 2022 – Call it defiance or acceptance, the world’s most experienced travelers are returning to international travel despite a war in Eastern Europe,…

Major Shift in Comfort Levels for Cruises 

Lebanon, N.H. – May 9, 2022 – Call it defiance or acceptance, the world’s most experienced travelers are returning to international travel despite a war in Eastern Europe, threats of new COVID variants, and lingering fears following two years of pandemic-related restrictions, according to the Global Rescue Spring 2022 Traveler Safety and Sentiment Survey.  

“Now more than ever, people want to travel. Many (27%) travelers expect to spend extra time or more money – or both – on upcoming vacations to compensate for the two-year pandemic-induced travel moratorium,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue, the 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. 

“Travelers see the best window for international travel is now. They’re not going to miss it despite government policy hurdles, remaining coronavirus fears or military conflict in Eastern Europe,” Richards said. 

An overwhelming majority (84%) of travelers are less or much less concerned about travel today compared to the beginning of the pandemic.  

More than three-quarters (78%) of respondents say the threat of a new COVID variant is not likely or not likely at all going to make them cancel or postpone international travel this year. Nearly the same percentage (71%) of travelers report they are somewhat or not concerned about international travel since the beginning of the war in Ukraine.  

Experts predict international travel will meet, and possibly exceed, pre-pandemic levels in 2022. “People are going to travel in record numbers this year,” Richards said referring to the World Travel & Tourism Council travel projections. 

Many are already traveling abroad, according to the survey. More than half of the respondents (56%) have traveled internationally since the pandemic, a 33% increase compared to six months ago. Sixteen percent expect to travel internationally by the end of June, and another 16% plan to travel abroad by the end of the year.  

Travelers who cruise reflected a major swing in their comfort levels. Last summer, 74% of respondents reported they did not feel safe on a cruise compared to only 10% today who say they would not feel safe on a cruise, reflecting a seven-fold decrease in cruise ship fears.  

The survey results show more than three-quarters of travelers (76%) are planning outdoor activities and adventure trips for 2022. Forty-four percent of travelers are scheduling relaxation vacations, 33% are preparing for reunions with family and friends, 18% are looking forward to educational/learning trips, 12% are anticipating trips for weddings, honeymoons and anniversaries, 8% are planning cuisine-based travel and 2% are organizing genealogical/ancestral research travel. 

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 1,200 of its current and former members between April 5 and 9, 2022. The respondents exposed a significant range in travel confidence and international travel activity as well as preferences for international travel policies.  

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. 

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Hauling injured climbers off Everest

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The Future of Travel: Virtual Reality and a New Threat Matrix

What is the future of travel? Our experts forecast a rise in mixed-reality trips, space and undersea tourism, disease-detection tech and more.

The future of travel will include distinct destinations, including space travel, undersea expeditions and virtual reality trips. It will also include a new threat matrix. Virtual reality, augmented reality and mixed reality are opportunities that could supplement physical travel. 

“The argument goes that the material world may lose its allure as virtual reality technology advances. I disagree,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue and a member of the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board at the U.S. Department of Commerce. 

“Virtual reality and its derivatives are ‘pseudo travel’ and, ultimately, we’re going to want to go see the places in the flesh. However, virtual reality will likely enable us to immersively share our experiences with friends and family in a way that brings these destinations to life like no slide show ever could.”

Undersea and the cosmos are the next long-term destination priorities. Space tourism is already available, although at present a 90-minute tour costs nearly half a million dollars per person for a few minutes of weightlessness. 

“It’s only a matter of time before opportunity increases, excursions mature, and costs decrease for space travel,” Richards said.

The tide of undersea tourism is rising, too. The world’s first underwater hotel opened in 2018, the world’s largest underwater restaurant cut the ribbon a year later, and underwater art galleries are spreading like Ngaro Underwater Sculpture Trail in Australia’s Whitsunday Islands – each bring marine tourism closer to travelers.  

New Threats, Security

The next decade of travel threats will also include threats experienced in the last decade, including the threat of pandemics. “While the current pandemic is waning and some may believe there’s no need to spend money to protect against a new potential pandemic, they’re wrong. It’s not a matter of if, but when, a new pandemic will emerge and we now have the means to prevent it, provided we have the will,” Richards said.

Technology exists today to identify pathogens that spread through the air.

“We can use technology in transportation hubs to identify infectious disease outbreaks and take immediate action. That technology can be deployed in a way so the protocols don’t increase friction in travel,” he said.

 

[Related reading: The Ultimate World Travel Safety Kit ]

 

Health security measures deployed in airports and railway terminals are essential.

“Adding pathogen scanners to the current array of metal detectors, backscatter x-ray machines, millimeter-wave scanners, and cabinet x-ray machines should be a priority,” Richards said. 

Global leaders have sufficient data from the coronavirus pandemic to know what works when it comes to protecting human lives and economic livelihood.

“Pandemic threats can be mitigated if we put our minds and our resources into them,” he said. 

Lessons Learned

For most travelers, the major learnings from the pandemic will have a significant impact on the future of travel. Obtaining travel protection and using local getaways are the two biggest lessons realized since the pandemic onset.

“The pandemic raised awareness of the limitations of travel insurance and the value of having stand-alone medical assistance and an evacuation safety net that is not an ordinary, off-the-shelf travel insurance policy,” said Jim Sano, the former president of Geographic Expeditions, a Yosemite Park Ranger and senior advisor for Global Rescue.

Richards agrees. “The traveler mindset made a tectonic shift, moving travel protection for emergency medical services and evacuation from ‘optional’ to ‘obligatory.’ Travelers learned emergency rescue and evacuation services are often essential, whether it’s due to COVID-19, a natural disaster, civil unrest or simply needing emergency help when you’re traveling,” he said.  

The second important lesson travelers learned is the beauty and convenience of local travel and exploration.  

COVID-19 opened the door for people to discover and appreciate the great outdoors nearby, and people flooded through the doorway.

“Outdoor activity worldwide is reaching unprecedented heights of curiosity and participation as travelers learn to take advantage of local, outdoor activities. We learned, too, and eliminated our ‘miles-from-home’ requirement to access rescue services,” Richards said.  

In business travel, the next several years will challenge managers and employees to strike a balance to achieve business productivity and worker satisfaction. A third of business travelers now have a remote work schedule and many of them will travel more and longer as a result. The prospect of working from anywhere under more flexible attendance policies is going to give many staffers the ability to live and work in places they couldn’t before.

 

[Related reading: Duty of Care and the Future of Digital Nomads]

 

“Virtual substitution for in-person meetings is here to stay. The pandemic has demonstrated productive work can be done from almost anywhere, leading people to take advantage of that circumstance. The future of business travel will be structured around more digital nomadism and location-independent work,” he said. 

The biggest management challenge in this evolving environment will be the ability to supervise a location-independent workforce. 

“Managing the remote workforce will be a new challenge as unprecedented numbers of employees log in from the beach, mountains and other places where they’ve chosen to live,” Richards said.

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Travel Hacks for the Super Rich, from Bling Empire’s Christine Chiu

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International Travel for Students and Grads This Summer

Post-grad travel? Summer internship? Revenge travel is kicking in for students of all ages, and they are including international trips in their summer plans.

Post-grad travel? Summer internship? Revenge travel is kicking in for students of all ages, and they are including international trips in their summer plans.


This year’s group of approximately two million U.S. college graduates have spent the last two years pursuing their academic and professional ambitions despite campus closures, online classes and remote internships.

Now, revenge travel is kicking in for students of all ages: high school, college and newly graduated. Whether it is a chance to see the world before the 9 to 5 starts or an internship to add market value to classroom education, students are including international travel in their summer plans.

Travel Protection Across the Globe

student-revenge-travel

What makes the best gift for a student planning to travel? A Global Rescue membership, which provides 24/7 travel advisory services and emergency medical evacuation services. It certainly came in handy when Jordan Glovsky, a rising sophomore at the University of Arizona, was in Africa on a summer internship.

“Jordan was living in Cape Coast, Ghana and working in a hospital,” said Eileen Glovsky, his mother and a change management consultant. “He had met a number of gap-year students and traveled to Togo for a weekend with this multi-lingual group of young men and women.”

At some point during his trip, he started to experience severe pain while breathing.

“Local shoppers noticed his discomfort and immediately stepped in to assist. Initially Jordan went to a local clinic, but the services were less than adequate,” Glovsky Eileen said.

Jordan went to the U.S. Embassy for assistance. The helpful staff directed him to a local private hospital and called Eileen. Jordan also called Global Rescue.

“The embassy was really happy that we had Global Rescue to assist us,” Eileen said.

Glad to Have Global Rescue

travel-protection-graduation-gift-idea

Eileen and Jordan were also happy to have Global Rescue.

“Global Rescue reached out to me to let me know they were working with Jordan and would assist him while in the hospital,” Eileen said. “This was extremely helpful since he was in a French-speaking country. One of his traveling companions who spoke French did stay with him, but having someone to translate medical information was very helpful.”

Multiple tests were run in an attempt to identify the issue, but nothing specific was ever identified. Global Rescue kept the family in the loop the entire time.

“Results and medical history questions were posed to me (with Jordan’s permission) so I could be an active participant in decisions about his care and the decision to travel back to the U.S. for further diagnostic testing,” Eileen said. “I was pleased with how communicative Global Rescue was through the whole process. I never felt the need to jump on a plane to join Jordan.  I knew he was in good hands as I got about three calls a day to keep me posted.”

While Jordan was able to take a commercial flight home, the last-minute scheduling would’ve been cost prohibitive for Eileen. She estimates his flight home on a commercial airliner after his hospital discharge would have cost more than $5,000 without a Global Rescue membership.

Global Rescue Gifting

“Global Rescue offered to meet him at the airport in Boston. They even called a few days after he arrived back to check in on him,” Eileen said. “I can’t tell you how much it meant to have Global Rescue as a partner.”

Jordan, now a certified AEMT, hasn’t done much traveling in the past two years, but the Glovsky family will continue to purchase Global Rescue for lengthy or adventure-specific trips or destinations with insufficient medical care or security.

“Even if you think you have coverage from a travel program (business, school, Peace Corps) invest the money in Global Rescue,” Eileen said. “You won’t be dealing with a third party to figure out what services you have. The program that Jordan was a participant in allegedly had coverage, but I never heard from them until he had been transported back to the U.S.”

Graduation Gift Idea

get-a-global-rescue-membership

A Global Rescue membership may have saved the life of Lily Goodman, whose parents called Global Rescue when she started vomiting blood on a school trip to China. Global Rescue’s medical experts translated records and correspondence between Lily’s family and the Chinese doctors, providing a detailed review of all medical reports.

It was essential for Maredith Richardson, who lost her passport in Paris the day the pandemic lockdown ended. Global Rescue streamlined the replacement process for her. Tenn Hildebrand, studying abroad during a gap year, was bitten by a wild dog shortly after he arrived in India. Global Rescue provided translation services, reviewed medical records, and helped him obtain and administer the medication he needed.

Global Rescue student travel memberships are annual memberships available to full-time students under the age of 35. Students will have access to updates on restrictions, quarantines and hotspots; experts who can provide immediate information regarding appropriate nearby health care facilities all over the world, and emergency medical evacuation services to a hospital of choice. An annual student membership starts at $289.

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The Future of Business Travel, Road Warriors and Office-Bound Workers

Digital Nomadism, Location-Independent Work Here to Stay Lebanon, N.H. May 3, 2022 – The next several years of business travel and an office-bound workforce will be a bit like the Wild West as business managers…

Digital Nomadism, Location-Independent Work Here to Stay

Lebanon, N.H. May 3, 2022 – The next several years of business travel and an office-bound workforce will be a bit like the Wild West as business managers and employees pioneer a new balance for productivity as the world emerges from the worst of the pandemic, according to travel risk expert Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue. National Travel and Tourism Week (May 1-7) celebrates the value of business travel, especially in a year when the business road warrior community and the travel industry recover from the worst of the pandemic that effectively grounded international business travel.   

“The future of business travel will be structured around more digital nomadism and location-independent work. Both of which are not going away,” Richards said.

A third of business travelers now have a remote work schedule and many of them will travel more and longer as a result. 

“Virtual substitution for in-person meetings is here to stay. The pandemic has demonstrated productive work can be done from almost anywhere, leading to people taking advantage of that circumstance,” he said. 

The prospect of working from anywhere under more flexible attendance policies is going to give many staffers the ability to live and work in places they couldn’t before. The biggest management challenge in this evolving environment will be the ability to supervise a location-independent workforce.

“Managing the remote workforce will be a new challenge as unprecedented numbers of employees log in from the beach, mountains and other places where they’ve chosen to live. Management and employees need to consider how duty of care plays a role,” Richards said.

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. 

 

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Travel Hesitancy: Real for Some, Not for Most

Lebanon, N.H. – May 2, 2022 – Despite international borders opening and COVID severity diminishing, one–out–of three travelers are experiencing travel hesitancy due to the war in Ukraine, the possibility of new coronavirus variants or…

Lebanon, N.H. – May 2, 2022 – Despite international borders opening and COVID severity diminishing, one–out–of three travelers are experiencing travel hesitancy due to the war in Ukraine, the possibility of new coronavirus variants or lingering fears following two years of pandemic-related restrictions, according to the Global Rescue Spring 2022 Traveler Safety and Sentiment Survey.

Seven–out–of 10 (71%) of survey takers are somewhat concerned, concerned or much more concerned, about international travel since the beginning of the war in Ukraine. The rest (29%) report they are not concerned at all.

Traveler hesitancy is also coming from anxiety about where to go, or when to get back to travel after two years of pandemic-related travel restrictions. “In January 2021, 55% of respondents said they were more or much more concerned about travel. Today, 45% fewer travelers are expressing travel hesitancy. The recent survey reveals less than a third (30%) of travelers are experiencing re-entry to travel anxiety,” 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.

Conversely, the survey revealed 89% of respondents say the war in Ukraine has not changed their travel plans and the overwhelming majority (70%) of travelers are not experiencing any re-entry to travel anxiety. An even larger majority (84%) of survey takers report they are less or much less concerned about travel today compared to the beginning of the pandemic.

“Most travelers (78%) do not consider the threat of future COVID-19 variants significant enough to make them cancel or postpone international travel this year,” Richards said. “More than half of respondents (56%) already have traveled internationally since the pandemic with 35% expecting to travel abroad before the end of the year.”

COVID-19 remains a concern with international travelers, less so for the potential threat of a severe illness and more so due to the possibility of being stranded in a foreign country. According to the survey, 59% of respondents say testing positive for COVID-19 and being stranded away from home is their biggest fear about international travel. Fifteen percent of travelers say producing a negative COVID-19 test to meet U.S. re-entry requirements is their main concern.

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 1,200 of its current and former members between April 5 and 9, 2022. The respondents exposed a significant range in travel confidence and international travel activity as well as preferences for international travel policies.

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.

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Mission Briefs: March 2022

Every day, Global Rescue personnel are involved in medical, security and travel operations worldwide. Here are highlights from some of our most recent operations in various locations.

Photo © Daniel Needham, a Global Rescue 2021 Photo Contest submission

Experts have spent the last two years searching for signals that travel recovery is imminent. Now, the signals are clear: recovery is happening despite some hesitation brought on by pandemic hesitancy, higher fuel prices and the war in Ukraine.

Traveler activity in and out of U.S. airports reached past 90% of pre-pandemic levels. Nearly half of travelers have already taken an international trip since the start of the pandemic. COVID-19 cases are falling in every state. Nine out of ten travelers are less concerned about travel since the pandemic started.

At the same time, travelers are responsive to the war in Ukraine. Initially, searches for international travel plummeted following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But interest quickly returned during the next few weeks, according to online metasearch engine and travel portal Kayak. Many travelers added security services to their travel protection portfolio to increase peace of mind. Since the war started, there has been a higher demand for Global Rescue’s non-medical emergency security service plans that provide evacuation capabilities when travelers are in danger from insurgent attacks, terrorism, civil unrest and natural disasters.

In a typical month, Global Rescue performs hundreds of operations in dozens of countries. Below are highlights from some of our most recent operations in various locations.

Motorcycle Accident in Uganda

Kasese-District-in-Uganda

Global Rescue medical operations received an emergency notification from a U.S. member who suffered injuries to his hand and upper body following a motorcycle accident in Kitagata, Uganda. The member’s thumb was severely damaged and there were possible injuries to his shoulder and back. The member received initial treatment at a nearby hospital but the treating physician recommended the member be transferred to a hospital capable of a higher level of care due to the extensive injuries to his thumb and potential injuries to his back, ribs and shoulder. The Global Rescue medical operations team immediately approved a ground medical evacuation to a hospital in Kampala, Uganda where the doctors performed pinning and reconstruction of the member’s left thumb. He was discharged and deemed fit to fly home where he will receive follow-up treatment for his injuries.

Altitude Sickness on Mount Everest 

Climbing Mount Everest is a tremendous challenge, even for those who are veterans of high-altitude activities. A U.S. member was at Mount Everest Base Camp (17,598 feet/5,364 meters) was not feeling well due to shortness of breath, chest pain and nausea. She was carried by one of the Sherpas to a lower altitude where her symptoms continued. Global Rescue was contacted and the medical operations team initiated a helicopter field rescue. The member was transported and admitted to a hospital in Kathmandu. The treating physician provided a diagnosis of Acute Mountain Sickness with mild High Altitude Cerebral Edema, and chest tightness at altitude. Following treatment and overnight rest, the member was discharged with instructions to rest and continue her recovery in her hotel until her flight home.

Nepal High Altitude Rescue

Gorakshep,-Nepal

Trekking at higher altitudes can lead to headaches, dizziness, fatigue and shortness of breath. That’s what happened to a member from Fort Erie, Canada while trekking in Gorakshep, Nepal. The member’s Sherpa contacted Global Rescue operations and reported the member had an unsteady gait, dizziness, generalized weakness and vomiting. Global Rescue’s medical operations team immediately confirmed the situation and initiated an airborne field rescue. The member was successfully transported by helicopter to a hospital in Kathmandu where he was admitted and treated for High Altitude Cerebral Edema. He recovered for a few days before being discharged and declared fit to fly home.

Potential Skull Fracture After a Fall in Central African Republic 

A member from Dubai accidentally fell while traveling in the Central African Republic. The next day Global Rescue received a message that the member was experiencing a clear, yellow discharge from his ears. Global Rescue medical operations physicians reviewed the case and determined that the member needed immediate evacuation to a hospital with CT imaging, neurosurgical assessment and surgical capabilities due to the possibility of a skull fracture and neurosurgical complications. Since no facilities meeting those criteria exist within the Central African Republic, the Global Rescue medical operations team initiated an airborne and ground medical evacuation to an appropriate medical facility in Nairobi. The member underwent a surgical assessment and multiple diagnostic and radiographic procedures. The neurosurgeon in charge of his care ruled out internal bleeding, fractures, intracranial injuries and other significant issues. The member was discharged from the hospital and returned to his home safely where he planned to follow up with his physician.

Safari Field Rescue in Chad 

Safari-in-Chad

Travelers to remote, international regions can experience extreme weather, challenging environments and unusual dangers. Sometimes those conditions can cause anything from mild discomforts to severe reactions. A U.S. member traveling to Melfi, Chad started to exhibit signs and symptoms of worsening dehydration with altered levels of consciousness. The Global Rescue medical operations knew the member had an underlying condition characterized by progressive anemia, low blood pressure, weakness and skin discoloration. The added condition of dehydration could lead to electrolyte problems. Global Rescue initiated an airborne field rescue to a medical facility in N’Djamena where the member was treated with intravenous fluids.  The member was discharged and recovered well.

Heli-Skiing Accident in Canada

Skiing accidents are not uncommon. But when you’re heli-skiing in remote areas and have an accident it’s essential to have an emergency plan. Thankfully, a heli-skier from Milan, Italy who was enjoying the mountains of Kitimat-Stikine in Canada had such a plan as a Global Rescue member. She injured her right knee while heli-skiing. She was unable to bear any weight on her leg and, following a medical evaluation, Global Rescue arranged for helicopter transport back to the lodge. The member recovered sufficiently to arrange for her flights back home to Italy.

Paragliding Crash in the Himalayas 

paragliding-in-Nepal

A Global Rescue member and paragliding enthusiast from Hereford, U.K. needed field rescue from Burtibang, Nepal after he was involved in a paragliding crash, injuring his wrist. Global Rescue operations were notified, gathered critical information and launched an airborne field rescue. The member was transported to a hospital in Pokhara where treating physicians evaluated his injuries and determined he had suffered a fracture to his radial/ulnar (broken forearm) and would require surgery once he returned to his home. He was discharged from the medical center and deemed fit to fly for his return flight home where he will arrange for surgical management of his injury.

Bivy Stick Rescue in B.C. 

Bivy Stick users understand the lifesaving importance of having two-way satellite communications capability, just in case they get sick or injured when they’re skiing, trekking, hiking, climbing or simply traveling. That’s what one Bivy Stick user discovered firsthand while skiing in the Eldorado Basin in Squamish-Lillooet, British Columbia, Canada. Global Rescue medical operations received a notification about a Bivy Stick user who suffered an injured leg and would need airborne evacuation. The skier was stabilized, medicated and comfortable before an evacuation to an appropriate medical facility for treatment.

Skiing Accident in Austria 

skiing-in-Saint-Anton

Traveling in an airplane or being at high altitudes can be dangerous for people at risk for blood clots, also known as thrombosis. That was the case for a U.S. member who suffered a broken leg skiing in Saint Anton am Arlberg region of Austria. He was admitted to a nearby hospital where he underwent surgical repair to his leg and was cleared to fly home. Global Rescue reviewed the medical diagnosis and treatment and, since the member will be carrying heparin for thrombus prevention, recommended a medical escort. The member and the Global Rescue medical escort successfully flew from Zurich, Switzerland back to the member’s home in the U.S.