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MISSION BRIEFS: JANUARY 2022 — ACONCAGUA EDITION

The pandemic has changed the way most people and businesses operate but not for Global Rescue personnel, who continue to manage medical, security and travel operations worldwide. Here’s a peek at just a few of…

Aconcagua is not the highest mountain in the world, but, at 22,837 feet/6,961 meters, it is the tallest peak outside the Himalaya and Karakoram ranges. It is the loftiest mountain on the continent of South America, earning it a place among the Seven Summits. It is not a technical climb but walking in crampons and using an ice ax is necessary. Mountaineering expert Alan Arnette says the mountain is a relatively simple climb in that the approach is short and easy.  

Travel writer, military veteran, endurance athlete, chef and Global Rescue member Amanda Burrill had summited Denali, Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Elbrus before taking on Argentina’s Aconcagua. Despite her experience, the Aconcagua ascent included a major surprise. 

The unexpected lack of snow was a shock. “If I couldn’t melt snow to make drinking water and cook food, it was going to really mess up the expedition. I almost felt like I was in an alternate universe — it was so cold and windy, but where’s the damn snow?” she wondered. Burrill found an alternative water source and successfully summited. 

The Global Rescue Difference_v2

Make no mistake, it’s a tall mountain and it holds several challenges for high-climbers, including many from the recent winter season. In a typical 30-day period, Global Rescue executes hundreds of operations in dozens of countries and principalities. But for this special edition of Global Rescue’s Mission Briefs, we are exclusively highlighting a few of the many Aconcagua rescue operations completed in January.  

Blindness at High Altitude 

 “I am at Aconcagua and have suffered partial blindness at my right eye due to prolonged hypoxia at altitude.”  That was the emergency message from a Global Rescue member from Aruba. The Global Rescue medical operations team immediately launched an airborne field rescue and ground transport to the closest appropriate medical center. The member was successfully evacuated and was evaluated by an eye specialist who diagnosed a hemorrhage of the right eye. Retinal hemorrhages are a component of high-altitude retinopathy (HAR) in association with altitude illness. Fortunately, incidents of HAR generally resolve spontaneously without adverse visual outcomes. The member was discharged with a tomography report to present to his eye doctor when he returns home.  

Nepalese Resident Gets Acute Mountain Sickness   

A Nepalese member was diagnosed with severe Acute Mountain Sickness after persistent diarrhea and coughing. His oxygen saturation level was dangerously low at 50%. He was given supplemental oxygen and a dexamethasone injection in advance of a helicopter evacuation. The member was successfully medevaced and later transported to a nearby hospital for further evaluation. The member’s oxygen saturation improved to 97% and he was discharged in stable condition.  

Aconcagua-GR-Photo-Contest-1

While not technical, Aconcagua is a highly underestimated climb | A 2019 Global Rescue Photo Contest submission

Post-Summit Stroke Symptoms

After summiting Aconcagua, a Salt Lake City member was discovered semi-conscious and demonstrated symptoms similar to stroke — including facial droop, non-normal speech and upper extremity weakness— during his descent. Global Rescue conferred with the member following his helicopter evacuation from the mountain. The member received a brain scan at a nearby medical center and was initially diagnosed with a Transient Ischemic Attack — a temporary period of symptoms similar to those of a stroke that usually lasts a few minutes without permanent damage. The member remained under observation and received a further neurological assessment. He continued routine evaluations and displayed no further symptoms. He was discharged and has been asymptomatic.  

Knee Injury During Ascent 

A member suffered a knee injury while climbing Mount Aconcagua. He was seen by a base camp physician and was ordered to evacuate. Global Rescue initiated a helicopter air evacuation for the member to the closest appropriate medical center where he was diagnosed with a sprained left knee and was given medication and medical care instructions by the treating physician. 

New York Member Suffers HAPE 

High Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE) is a potentially life-threatening form of non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema that occurs in otherwise healthy people at altitudes typically above 8,200 feet/2,500 meters. Unfortunately, a New York member needed to evacuate Aconcagua after base camp physicians identified his symptoms as consistent with HAPE. Global Rescue ordered an airborne field rescue via helicopter. The member’s condition improved at the lower altitude and, soon after, he was able to resume his travels.  

Fatigue and Shortness of Breath 

Suffering from shortness of breath and fatigue, a member from Germany was airlifted off Aconcagua for medical attention related to moderate Acute Mountain Sickness. Following the successful field rescue, the member was transported to a lower altitude. She reported sustained shortness of breath, a sore throat and exhibited an inability to speak in full sentences. She was tested for COVID-19 and rested. After a few days, she recovered and learned her COVID-19 test was negative. The member’s flight was rescheduled and she returned home.  

sunrise-on-aconcagua-GR-Photo-Contest

Sunrise on Aconcagua | A 2019 Global Rescue Photo Contest submission

High Altitude Illness for a Canadian Member 

Outfitters leading an Aconcagua summit expedition discovered a Canadian team member was experiencing symptoms consistent with high-altitude sickness. Physicians at the base camp diagnosed the member with HAPE and moderate gastrointestinal pain. Global Rescue initiated an airborne field rescue and ground transport to a lower altitude. Following the evacuation, the member showed significant improvement. He was evaluated at a nearby hospital and received a prescription for antibiotics for diarrhea. He was discharged in stable condition with orders to rest before returning to Canada.  

An Arizona and Florida Climber Grounded by HAPE  

Two Global Rescue members, one from Arizona and the other from Florida, suffered symptoms of High Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE) and were immediately recommended for an airborne field rescue. The two members were successfully transported off the mountain to a lower altitude and evaluated by a local physician. Following a day of rest and recovery, the members were feeling well and set to return to the U.S. 

COVID-19 Field Rescue

A Global Rescue member from Brazil suffering from shortness of breath and a mild cough registered a blood-oxygen saturation level of 45%, well below normal. She also tested positive for COVID-19 and needed immediate evacuation. Global Rescue ordered a helicopter field rescue and ground transportation to a nearby hospital. The member was evaluated, prescribed medications and released from the hospital to quarantine at her hotel. Global Rescue monitored her condition while she isolated. Following a negative COVID-19 test result and no symptoms, the member was able to return home. 

Texas Climber Gets HAPE  

A Texas climber needed a helicopter evacuation off Aconcagua after being diagnosed with High Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE). The member was initially evaluated by a base camp physician who noted some fluid in the member’s lungs and recorded a blood-oxygen saturation level of 65%. Global Rescue launched an airborne field rescue for the member and ground transport to a nearby hospital. The member was given an injection of dexamethasone and diphenhydramine. Following significant improvement and registering a blood-oxygen saturation level of 96%, the member was discharged and advised to avoid high-altitude climbing for the next three months.   

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“Do Not Travel” Advisories, Explained

Explore what "Do Not Travel" warnings mean and how Global Rescue helps travelers navigate complex travel advisories.

What does “Do Not Travel” really mean? That’s what a well-traveled customer asked Global Rescue recently.

“I just checked the ‘Do Not Travel’ list. Basically the entire world has been put on a ‘Do Not Travel’ advisory. A few countries, like Sierra Leone, are not on this ‘Do Not Travel’ list, whereas countries like Switzerland and Antarctica are. I am not quite sure who makes this confusing ‘Do Not Travel’ list. Sierra Leone is a country with high crime and high levels of civil unrest, which you can’t really say of Switzerland. How would Global Rescue’s product fit into this unpleasant global blanket of ‘Do Not Travel’?”

 

An advertisement saying why traditional travel insurance isn't enough.

 

Global Rescue’s Perspective

It’s a valid question, and one we’ve been hearing more and more with the rise of omicron and other variants. What takes precedence when making travel plans: security risks, health risks, coronavirus risks, or a combination? And what warnings do you follow: The Department of State (DoS), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the country’s consular warnings or Global Rescue?

Here’s what travelers need to know about “do not travel” warnings according to Global Rescue travel experts from three departments — intelligence, operations and member services. We break down who is doing the warning, how to balance the information, and how Global Rescue creates its travel warnings.

Who Does The Warning?

The Department of State, established in 1789, is responsible for the nation’s foreign policy and international relations. To maintain diplomatic relations with 180 countries, the Department of State compiles and analyzes reports from overseas, provides logistical support to diplomatic posts, and issues passports and travel warnings. Travelers can access safety and security information about every country in the world on their website: travel.state.gov.

Understanding CDC Travel Health Notices

The CDC also offers Travel Health Notices and, more specifically, COVID-19 Travel Recommendations by Destination. Travel Health Notices, which have four levels of warning, inform travelers and clinicians about current health issues that impact travelers’ health — disease outbreaks, special events or gatherings, and natural disasters — in destinations around the world. The COVID-19 Travel Recommendations, with four levels of warning, are based on the number of COVID-19 cases in a destination.

“CDC risk levels and DoS Travel Advisories are not the same thing, although they sometimes match and they sometimes don’t,” said Kent Webber, senior manager of Intelligence Products and Services at Global Rescue. “There was a movement at the peak of the pandemic to synchronize the two, but this appears to be reverting back to separate ratings as merited.”

How Should Travelers Balance Warnings?

You’re researching your travel destination, say Kyrgyzstan, and you’re finding conflicting answers about the area’s safety. The CDC gives the country a Level 1 (Low Level of COVID-19) Warning — as does the state department (Exercise Normal Precautions). Dig a little deeper and the U.S. Embassy of The Kyrgyz Republic notes the country’s medical services have struggled to provide adequate care for serious cases of COVID-19.

As you investigate the security risks of Kyrgyzstan, you find muggings are commonplace — and sometimes violent. There’s also tension over the recognition of the Kyrgyz/Tajik border with clashes in May and December 2021, prompting Australia to give Kyrgyzstan a Level 4 Warning. And there could be hidden landmines.

How should travelers balance this safety and security information?

“The answer to this question varies from person to person, what they consider is important and what affects them most,” said David Koo, associate director of Operations at Global Rescue. “Personally, I evaluate security risk first, then health risk. Why? I can take measures to mitigate personal health risks — not interacting with stray dogs or cats so I don’t get bitten — unlike taking a trip to a high-security risk area where I cannot control external factors like the location, timing or actions of the perpetrators.”

As for COVID-19, you can’t avoid it, but you can reduce your risk of getting infected. Koo suggests following standard safety protocols — wearing face masks in public or crowded places, maintaining social distancing and practicing good personal hygiene — and consider vaccination in order to travel safely.

“The COVID health alerts will also alert you to travel restrictions,” he said. “This will help you adjust your trip plans.”

Global Rescue Looks at the Big Picture

a corporate employee, most probably a security analyst sitting behind multiple screens looking at data.

Global Rescue has a team of intelligence experts researching travel destinations and tracking possible health and security risks 24/7/365. The team culls information from a variety of global sources: news outlets, social media feeds, individual government alerts, Department of State and CDC health alerts, nature newsletters, global organizations, podcasts, broadcasts and blogs.

“It seems like rating countries should be an easy process but it’s not. We have the same difficulties with Global Rescue country ratings where we try to quantify health and security risks to come up with an overall risk,” Webber said. “Is it an art or science? Does one type of risk (or one of its components) weigh more than another? Is it the relationship between components constant or relative? At what point does medical supersede security or visa-versa?”

 

[Related Reading: Survey: Revenge Travel Continues Despite War; Riskier, Immersive Trips Increase]

 

There is no perfect solution, but members benefit from Global Rescue’s deep dive into all sources of travel information and on-the-ground travel experience to determine the big picture of a destination’s risk.

“It’s best to avoid reliance on a single source of information. It’s better to try and balance several sources to reach our own conclusions,” Webber said. “At Global Rescue, we try to come up with a defensible, logical conclusion so our customers don’t have to.”

The Global Rescue Intelligence Team adds another important layer of detail to their extensive research: The information isn’t one size fits all; it is context-based. So what may be considered an extreme safety threat in one country — civil unrest with protests and demonstrations — may not be so unusual in another country.

Even after you’ve researched and selected your destination, Global Rescue keeps travel risk information at your fingertips. You can set up real-time alerts to keep you apprised of any health or safety issues while you are on your trip.

 

What Does a Global Rescue Membership Cover?

“Medical advisory and evacuation services are available regardless of the travel advisories,” said Danielle Ferguson, manager of Member Services at Global Rescue.

The Do Not Travel warnings come into play if members have added security to their membership.

“If you are ill or injured in a Do Not Travel country, Global Rescue will still arrange and pay for a medical evacuation as the Do Not Travel restrictions only apply for security evacuations,” Ferguson said. “If someone travels an area rated Do Not Travel by the U.S. State Department, and has a security membership, Global Rescue can still arrange for an evacuation, however, the member is responsible for the cost.”

 

The Global Rescue Advantage

Global Rescue members are always able to access data compiled and evaluated by the intelligence and security teams. From daily event bulletins, monthly destination reports and specific information requests, a Global Rescue travel membership is a perfect way to travel prepared.

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International Travel Surging

Massive 88% jump in travel abroad; longer, more remote trips expected  Lebanon, N.H. – February 14, 2022 – Nearly half of travelers (49%) have already taken an international trip, reflecting an 88% jump in travel…

Massive 88% jump in travel abroad; longer, more remote trips expected 

Lebanon, N.H. – February 14, 2022 – Nearly half of travelers (49%) have already taken an international trip, reflecting an 88% jump in travel abroad since the summer of 2021. Domestically, 85% of respondents have already traveled, signaling an 18% increase since the summer of 2021, according to the Winter 2022 Global Rescue Travel Safety and Sentiment survey of the world’s most experienced travelers.  

More people are returning to travel domestically and abroad, according to the survey. Nine out of 10 travelers are “much less or less” concerned about travel since the pandemic, revealing a 22% increase in travel confidence since the summer of 2021.  

“All signals are pointing to the beginning of the end of international travel restrictions due to the pandemic. Countries like New Zealand, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and others are opening their borders as severe COVID-19 illnesses and hospitalizations decline, vaccinations increase and testing is more convenient. Domestic travel continues to increase but the big news is that travel abroad is surging,” said Dan Richards, CEO of Global Rescue, the leading provider of medical, security, evacuation and travel risk management services.  

Destination preferences continue to lean toward out-of-the-way places in the open air with fewer people. More than three-quarters of respondents (76%) are planning more outdoor, remote travel – a 40% increase compared to traveler responses nearly a year ago. For the first time since the pandemic started, an overwhelming majority of travelers (82%) indicated they are planning more trips lasting five or more days.  

“When people feel safe, they travel and we are seeing tremendous, positive change in the traveler confidence about their well-being,” Richards said. According to the survey, nearly half of respondents (47%) confirm they feel safest when vaccinated or recovered from COVID followed by having medical evacuation protection (20%) and visiting uncrowded destinations or outdoor activity (17%.) 

Despite the upturn in travel attitudes and behavior, more than half of travelers (52%) admit that COVID-19 infection, its variants or quarantine is still their number one travel fear, followed by trip cancellation (17%) and having an accident or sustaining an injury (16%).  

Those travel concerns are reflected in the ongoing increase in the awareness of, and desire, for medical evacuation services. Sixty-two percent of respondents – a 17% increase compared to the fall of 2021 –identified medical evacuation protection for rescue from point of injury or illness, including COVID-19, as their preferred protection. Cancel For Any Reason trip insurance was the second most important protection (15%) and transport from treating medical facility to home or home hospital of choice (10%) was third most important. 

Travelers are divided when it comes to their opinion of how government officials are handling travel choices during the pandemic. More than a third of respondents (38%) believe current COVID-19 restrictions are “impossibly strict” or “unnecessarily strict,” while slightly more (44%) say the restrictions are “just right.” Less than a fifth (17%) say the restrictions are “too lenient.” 

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 1,400 of its current and former members between January 25-29, 2022. The respondents exposed a significant rebound in travel confidence and travel abroad activity as well as critical preferences for remote, outdoor destinations and travel protection services. 

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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Global Rescue Traveler Sentiment and Safety Survey Highlights International Travel Surge

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A Travel Story: A Capital Rescue from Global Rescue 

Think medical evacuation protection is only essential when traveling internationally? After suffering a thighbone fracture during a domestic vacation, member Sandy Rogers will be the first to tell you otherwise. Here's the travel story of…

Traveling overseas, especially during a pandemic, triggers most travelers to consider medical evacuation protection.  

Rarely do travelers think about those same risks when their itinerary is domestic. 

That was Sandy Rodgers’ mindset. “I’ve been a member for several years because I travel a lot and I always have Global Rescue,” she said.  

But she changed her mind after leaving New Hampshire for a quick trip with her son to Washington, D.C. during the winter holidays. 

“I’ve been a member for several years. I assumed that being in the United States, it would be a piece of cake to get out of trouble or be transported for medical reasons. I soon found out differently. When I got hurt in Washington, D.C. it was impossible to leave without Global Rescue’s help,” Rodgers said. 

A Badly Damaged Femur While on Local Holiday 

Rodgers had flown from New Hampshire to Philadelphia to pick up her son before the pair drove to Washington, D.C. during the Christmas Holiday.  

“We checked in to a really nice hotel and went about our business for a couple of days visiting the Smithsonian museums, doing some sightseeing, and enjoying the restaurants,” she said. 

After dinner on Christmas Eve, Rodgers returned to her hotel and went to bed around 10 p.m. She got up in the middle of the night to use the restroom and accidentally fell, landing badly on her leg and hitting her head. 

“When I fell, I tried to get a hold of my son who was in another room on an upper floor. He was out like a light and didn’t answer. I called 9-1-1. The next thing I knew, I had four gorgeous firefighters looking out for me,” she joked.

The local first responders transported Rodgers to a nearby hospital where physicians examined her. She underwent surgical care for a right femur (thighbone) fracture. Following two weeks of recovery at the hospital, it was time for Rodgers to receive physical and occupational therapy post-femur surgery and for her to enter physical therapy. Hospital officials suggested she conduct her rehabilitation in D.C.  

“I thought that might be the way to go. Do the rehab in D.C. and then go home to New Hampshire,” Rodgers said. 

But her D.C. medical team soon discovered her injury didn’t meet the requirements for rehabilitation at the suggested facility. Rodgers needed to switch her follow-up recovery convalescence to a facility in  New Hampshire. Unfortunately, there was no provision available to transport her. 

She wondered, “How am I going to get out of here? And then I thought of Global Rescue.”  

Global Rescue Gets Her Home 

commercial-flight

Rodgers called Global Rescue and, without any delay, she was on her way out of D.C.  

She was able to comfortably sit up for several hours and stand with some assistance. Her D.C. treating physician cleared Rodgers to fly commercial with a medical escort. Global Rescue’s physician staff agreed, initiating the transport and deploying a medical escort to oversee Rodgers’ ground and air transport.  

“They were really nice and efficient. I couldn’t believe how good they were,” she said. 

Rodgers was transported by ambulance from the hospital to the D.C. airport. After landing in Boston, the Global Rescue team escorted Rodgers by SUV to the rehab facility in Manchester, New Hampshire. 

“I never saw a bill, a plane ticket, nothing. The Global Rescue team took care of everything.” 

Rodgers plans to tell all her friends and family to get Global Rescue whether they’re traveling globally or locally.  

“I’ve got lots of friends who go nowhere overseas and they should know the value of a Global Rescue membership when they’re traveling locally,” she said. “People know Global Rescue can get you off of a mountain. People need to know they can get you to safety locally, too.”

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Global Rescue Protection Travels with the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Team to the 2022 Winter…

For the past five Winter Games, Global Rescue has been poised to provide emergency support in the event of illness or injury for team members of the U.S. Ski & Snowboard team. 

Providing emergency medical and security protection for the U.S. Ski & Snowboard team at the Winter Olympics is an ongoing, and ever-changing, operation.  

The 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China will be unlike any other because of COVID-19. While the U.S. Ski & Snowboard team set out for the celebrated international competition, Global Rescue is poised to provide emergency support in the event of illness or injury among any of the team members. 

“As we have for the past five Winter Games, we have emergency action plans in place for the U.S. Ski & Snowboard team,” said Dan Richards, Global Rescue CEO. 

COVID-19 Is Top of Mind

Global Rescue’s role during the Olympics in China is focused largely on medical emergencies and evacuation, especially for COVID-19. This is in stark contrast to the safety and security concerns during the 2016 Winter Olympics in Sochi when threats from terrorism were looming. But both concerns require similar action.  

“A threat is a threat, so there really is no difference in the need to leave a situation at a moment’s notice, whether it is an accident, medical emergency or pandemic. Getting out quickly and efficiently is the key,” said Tom Horrocks, U.S. Ski & Snowboard spokesman.  

Chinese officials have implemented a closed-loop policy to protect against the spread of the disease.  

“Global Rescue medical and security experts will not be allowed on site, but members of the U.S. Ski & Snowboard team will have access to Global Rescue’s on-staff medical experts for real-time consultations with U.S.-based medical professionals who will help sort out any injuries or illnesses, including COVID-19,” Richards said.  

What Happens in an Emergency

In the event of a major injury or illness — like a head injury or serious COVID-19 case— U.S. Ski & Snowboard members will be able to supplement on-site diagnoses and treatment with Global Rescue on-staff medical experts.   

“With hotline access to medical advisory and a host of other services, the Global Rescue safety net provides an additional layer of protection beyond the closed-loop Chinese officials have installed. Global Rescue medical experts can assess the team member’s circumstance, provide additional medical guidance and arrange for their medical evacuation back to their home hospital of choice in the United States, if necessary,” Richards said.  

Official Chinese resources will handle the ground and air transports for local medical evacuations within China. “Any emergency medical situation that requires outside, non-Chinese support will be handled on a case-by-case basis by international government and medical officials. It’s all quite unprecedented,” Richards said.  

Global Rescue has helped protect the health and safety of U.S. Ski & Snowboard members since 2006.  

“Global Rescue provides valuable travel protection, security and medical resource services for U.S. Ski & Snowboard athletes and staff as they travel abroad to compete on the world stage,” said Sophie Goldschmidt, president and CEO, U.S. Ski & Snowboard.

Global Rescue Membership: Not Just for Medical Evacuations

Travel protection membership is not only for dramatic airborne medical evacuations or rescues, many of our members take advantage of our in-house medical advisory services.  

[Related Reading:
The Ultimate World Travel Safety Kit]

“We have a lot of calls about altitude and acute mountain sickness, ski injuries, sinusitis and sinus infections, and traveler’s diarrhea,” said Jeff Weinstein, medical operations supervisor at Global Rescue. Members with medical questions are immediately connected to the Global Rescue Medical Operations team of critical care paramedics, nurses, and physicians. The on-site team is supported by the Elite Medical Group, the Johns Hopkins Emergency Medicine Division of Special Operations, and Partners HealthCare.

Global Rescue’s Intelligence Team monitors travel risk and health safety information around the clock following hundreds of news outlets, social media feeds, government alerts, newsletters, global organizations, podcasts, broadcasts and blogs. This risk information includes COVID-19 hotspots, border closings and new testing requirements.  

“Our intelligence group analyzes and publishes destination reports for 219 countries, and Global Rescue members can access this information online or with a phone call,” said Harding Busch, manager of security operations for Global Rescue. “It takes a highly trained team to keep up with what is happening in the world today and the constant ebb and flow of travel alerts require continuous monitoring. Travelers should enroll to receive travel alerts so they can enjoy their time abroad.”  

Unlike other companies, the medical, security and intelligence expertise is all in-house at Global Rescue.

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How to avoid COIVD-19 on your next vacation

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Top Romantic Adventure Vacations for Thrill-Seeking Couples

Where do adventurous couples vacation? In honor of Valentine’s Day, we tapped our Safe Travel Partners for a few suggestions that allow you to indulge in adrenaline while revving up the romance. 

Couples massages and poolside cocktails are nice. But if you’re part of a pair who crave a little adrenaline in addition to your chilled champagne and rose-petal-strewn bed, look no further than this collection of adventure getaways curated by those who know best: Global Rescue Safe Travel Partners.

Covid-Services_web-page2 

Heli-Skiing and Sky Gazing in Northern Iceland 

Eleven Experience is known for its collection of luxury boutique properties set in far-flung locales with in-house guides who handcraft the ultimate adventure itineraries — everything from fishing in the glacier-carved river valleys of Chile to mountain biking in the Gunnison Valley of Colorado. 

[Related Reading:
7 Off-Beat Travel Adventure Alternatives]

But the property that best blends romance and adventure? Deplar Farm, located on a converted sheep farm in the Fljót Valley in northern Iceland. This 12-room Nordic-inspired lodge — decked out in sheepskin, Moroccan wools and textured walls — serves as the launching point to more than 1,500-square-miles of untouched skiable mountain terrain via helicopter from two on-site helipads. That means unrivaled access to rolling descents and steep couloirs with runs averaging around 3,000 vertical feet — some all the way to the ocean. Afterward, treat tired muscles to an evening spent soaking in the lodge’s open-air geothermal pool while the Northern Lights seductively dance overhead. 

A Romantic Road in Southern Germany 

Romantic-Road

It’ll be difficult not to fall in love all over again while touring the 285-mile (460-kilometer) scenic byway through Bavaria, known as the “Romantic Road.” Serving up scenes of castle-studded valleys, rolling vineyards and quaint cobblestone villages lined with half-timbered homes, the romantic adventure is the closest thing to driving through a fairytale.  

The key is to not rush it; rather, rent a car and plan a thoughtful three- to five-day trip, starting in the northernmost point of the route: the stately baroque town of Würzburg. From there, head south, through the small vineyards of the Tauber Valley to Rothenburg ob der Tauber, which has managed to maintain a late medieval appearance thanks to a still-standing town wall with more than 40 towers. Other stops to hit further south: Nördlingen, populated by snug rows of buildings with red-orange sloping roofs; Augsburg, with its fountains and revered guild houses; and Steingaden, best known for its oval rococo church with a resplendent trompe-l’oeil ceiling. The route culminates in the town of Füssen, at the foothills of the Alps and home to the elaborate Neuschwanstein Castle (if it looks familiar, it’s because it served as the real-life inspiration for Walt Disney’s Sleeping Beauty palace). 

A Personal Climbing Route in Southcentral Alaska  

Mimi Lichtenstein of Truvay Travel, a Virtuoso-endorsed travel advisor, has done via ferratas before, but she says nothing better caters to a couple’s sense of adventure than the one recently installed in the Alaskan wilderness by Tordrillo Mountain Lodge. (Not sure what a via ferrata is? It’s a fixed steel-cable, protected climbing route that makes scaling a mountain accessible to beginner climbers). 

Reachable only by a 10-minute helicopter ride from the lodge, this first and only via ferrata in the state allows climbers (led by a guide) to scale the route’s 900 vertical feet overlooking the Triumvirate Glacier and Tordrillo Mountains. “It’s hard to describe what it feels like once you reach the top of the mountain,” said Lichtenstein. “It’s just you two and the vast wilderness, glaciers, bluebird sky and mountains.”  

After scrawling your names in the book among the others who have completed the climb, the helicopter whisks you back to the lodge for a celebratory meal. Think: Alaskan river-to-table dining, starring fresh local halibut, white king salmon and black cod, plus a wine cellar stocked with more than 500 bottles to boot. 

Safari and Spa in the Serengeti 

Singita-Sasakwa-Lodge-photo -courtesy-of -Singita

Photos courtesy of Singita

Romantic safari lodges are plentiful in Africa. Still, it’s rare to find a place that goes as above and beyond for adventurous couples quite like the Hillside Suite at Singita Sasakwa Lodge in Tanzania. Set in the western corridor of the Serengeti on a hillside in a secluded location away from the main lodge, this private villa for two comes decked in polished parquet floors, vintage collectibles and Persian carpets. More importantly, it’s the ultimate launch point for wildlife viewing — not just because of its sweeping views through floor-to-ceiling walls of windows, two outdoor decks and an infinity-edge pool, but because couples also receive their own private game vehicle and field guide. That means the pace of each day is set according to the guests’ interests and frame of mind, allowing total flexibility over mealtimes and activities.  

[Related Reading:
6 Simple Ways to Travel More Consciously]

After a day spent exploring the surrounding 350,000 acres of Serengeti savannah — of which this location is known for lion, leopard and cheetah — return to the butler-serviced suite for an in-room meal, followed by a couple’s massage on the pool deck while the sun sets over the abundant grasslands. It’s the ideal place to find a profound connection with nature as well as each other.  

Dining Adventures in the Maldives 

What’s more memorable than a romantic dinner for two during your getaway? A romantic dinner set in an out-of-this-world atmosphere — of which two locations in the Maldives more than deliver. Hurawalhi Island Resort, set in Lhaviyani Atoll, and Soneva Fushi, located in the neighboring Baa Atoll. 

Soneva Fushi has been on my personal bucket list ever since I saw their bungalows with slides going into the sea,” said Lichtenstein of Truvay Travel. But in late 2021, it brought luxury to new adventurous heights with the world’s first-ever fine-dining zip-line experience. You read that right: Couples zip through the resort’s thick jungle, indulging in a series of hors d’oeuvres at each platform, before removing their harnesses and tucking into the final six-course meal in the open-concept treetop kitchen.

Prefer to stay lower to the ground? How about the ocean floor? “Hurawalhi Island Resort is a 90-villa adults-only luxury resort offering the world’s largest panoramic underwater restaurant that is unlike anything else,” said Lichtenstein. Located 19 feet below sea level, the intimate restaurant is housed in an all-glass, dome-shaped structure. With virtually no obstruction to the sea, diners aren’t just treated to dinner, but a surrounding show of fluttering marine life as far as the eye can see.  

A Double-Dose of Remote Romance in Belize

Gladden-Island-photo-courtesy-of-Choose-Belizejpg

Photos courtesy of Choose Belize

“Belize’s Gladden Island and Valley Stream are about as secluded as anything can get,” said Polly Alford of Choose Belize, a booking site and travel company specializing in personalized, luxury beach, island and jungle vacations. “By doing a combo-stay — four nights at Gladden, then four nights at Valley Stream — you get to experience the best of both Belize’s natural settings: the barrier reef and the jungle rainforest.”  

Located on a caye 20 miles northeast of Placencia near the widest section of the Belize Barrier Reef, Gladden Island has been hailed time and time again as “the most private island resort in the world.” There’s even a “privacy meter” installed on-site to indicate if you’re alone or if a staff member is visiting the island at your request (the staff resides unseen on another neighboring island). While couples can snorkel, scuba, spearfish and more, one of Alford’s suggested pastimes is simply taking in unobstructed views of the Caribbean Sea from the villa. “You can open the walls of windows up for an open-air tub experience or take your dinner on the rooftop with an up-close-and-personal view of the reef.” 

After a 30-minute helicopter flight over the ocean and the mainland’s Maya Mountains, sister resort Valley Stream offers the same unparalleled level of solitude, perched 500-feet up on a cliffside in the middle of the remote jungle. “You feel like you’re staying in a tree,” said Alford. “There’s nothing like sitting in that infinity-edge hot tub and pool in the warm rain looking out to the 200 acres of surrounding rainforest.” 

A Walk to Remember in the Czech Republic

When it comes to romance, the city of Prague will always be special for Shane Jones and Barbara Haight, founders of Worldwide Adventure Guides. It’s not only where they first fell in love (they traveled there together as friends, returned as something more), but it’s where Jones proposed to Haight, where they had their wedding in 2008 and where they’ve celebrated subsequent anniversaries.  

“One of the most romantic ways to spend a day is simply walking through the stunning city,” said Jones. Specifically, he suggests meeting under the centuries-old Astronomical Clock in the Old Town Square, then buying a hot mulled wine (known as “gluhwein”) from a street vendor. From there, stroll along the charming winding streets and alleyways — stopping at any of the cafes, shops or pubs that catch your eye — to the famous Charles Bridge. Continue making your way up to Prague Castle to get a stunning view of the city from high above it. “Everyone should do this stroll at least once in their life,” said Jones. “We do it every time we visit Prague.” 

Travel Protection for You and Your Sweetheart

We all want to protect the ones we love. Whatever your romantic couples adventure entails, be certain to include protection — Global Rescue medical emergency and evacuation protection. Whether sick (even with COVID-19), injured or simply looking for medical advice during your travels, a Global Rescue family membership is like having a team of medical and security experts right in your back pocket. Not to mention, you don’t have to be married to qualify for a family membership (like some other providers do) — cohabitation and living at the same address is sufficient. 

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Going solo? What do women want and need when travelling?

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Global Rescue CEO: Covid Is Going Out ‘With A Bang,’ But Here’s What Travelers Need…

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Global Rescue Supports U.S. Ski & Snowboard Team During Winter Olympics in China

Lebanon, N.H. – February 1, 2022 – The 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China will be unlike any other because of the COVID-19 threat. While the U.S. Ski & Snowboard team prepares for the celebrated…

Lebanon, N.H. – February 1, 2022 – The 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China will be unlike any other because of the COVID-19 threat. While the U.S. Ski & Snowboard team prepares for the celebrated international competition, Global Rescue is poised to provide emergency support in the event of illness or injury among any of the team members, as the company did during the 2006, 2010, 2014, 2016 and 2018 Winter Games. “As we have for the past five Winter Games, we have emergency action plans in place for the U.S. Ski and Snowboard team,” said Dan Richards, Global Rescue CEO.  

“Chinese officials have implemented a closed-loop policy to protect against the spread of the disease. Global Rescue medical and security experts will not be allowed on-site, but members of the U.S. Ski & Snowboard team will have access to Global Rescue’s on-staff medical experts for real-time consultations with U.S.-based medical professionals who will help sort out any injuries or illnesses, including COVID-19,” Richards said. 

Global Rescue has helped protect the health and safety of U.S. Ski & Snowboard members since 2006. “Global Rescue provides valuable travel protection, security and medical resource services for U.S. Ski & Snowboard athletes and staff as they travel abroad to compete on the world stage,” said Sophie Goldschmidt, President and CEO, U.S. Ski & Snowboard. 

In the event of a major injury or illness — like a head injury or COVID-19 — U.S. Ski & Snowboard members will be able to supplement on-site diagnoses and treatment with Global Rescue on-staff medical experts.  

“With hotline access to medical advisory and a host of other services, the Global Rescue safety net provides an additional layer of protection beyond the closed loop Chinese officials have installed. Global Rescue medical experts can assess the team member’s circumstance, provide additional medical guidance and arrange for their medical evacuation back to their home hospital of choice in the United States, if necessary,” Richards said. 

Official Chinese resources will handle ground and air transports for medical evacuations. “Any emergency medical situation arising that requires outside, non-Chinese support will be handled on a case-by-case basis by international government and medical officials. It’s all quite unprecedented,” Richards said. 

“U.S. Ski & Snowboard athletes, coaches and staff are introduced to Global Rescue throughout many membership area touchpoints, including information contained in membership and sport education emails and through the benefits platform at my.usskiandsnowboard.org,” said Tom Horrocks, U.S. Ski & Snowboard. 

Global Rescue’s medical emergency and evacuation role during the Olympics in China is the larger focus compared to the safety and security concerns during the 2016 Winter Olympics in Sochi when threats from terrorism were looming. But both concerns require similar action. 

“A threat is a threat, so there really is no difference in the need to leave a situation at a moment’s notice, whether it is an accident, medical emergency, or pandemic. Getting out quickly and efficiently is the key,” Horrocks 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 decade. For more information, visit www.globalrescue.com.

 

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Members Who Amaze: Harshvardhan Joshi

Meet the mountaineer from Mumbai who summited Mount Everest in 2021 after beating COVID-19 a few days before summiting. He also completed the trek using only eco-friendly means.

Not every Global Rescue member needs an emergency evacuation. Some are confidently pursuing their dreams knowing they have a Global Rescue membership. Take, for example, this unlikely mountaineer from Mumbai who summited Mount Everest in 2021 after beating COVID-19 a few days before summiting. He also completed the trek using only eco-friendly means.


Harshvardhan Joshi may be one of the most talked-about mountaineers to summit Everest in 2021. Google his name and the headlines populate the proof: “25-yr-old conquers Everest, days after recovering from Covid-19,” and “Indian climber Harshvardhan Joshi claims historic ‘green summit’ of Everest.” In the last year alone, he’s delivered 17 motivational speeches, including a recent TEDx Talk about the power of grit. He even has his own Wikipedia page.

So, it’s hard to believe the soft-spoken 26-year-old native of Vasai, India (located on the outskirts of Mumbai), is also the unlikeliest of mountaineers. He’ll be the first to admit it, too.

“If you had told me at 15, 16, 17 years old that I would have done this, I wouldn’t have believed it either,” said Joshi, who goes by the nickname “Harsh.” “Back then, I hadn’t ever run a full 100 yards in my life.” 

That’s what makes the story of 26-year-old Joshi — a Global Rescue member since 2019 — so fascinating. How did this IT engineer, who long preferred academia to the outdoors, become a renowned endurance athlete, having summited major peaks like Stok Kangri (6,153 meters/20,187 feet), Lobuche East (6,119 meters/20,075 feet) and, now, Mount Everest (8,848 meters/29,032 feet)? Global Rescue sat down with him to find out. 

Joshi’s Journey to Mountaineering 

Harshvardhan-Joshi-mountaineering

“A lot of people who see me now, especially on social media, think I was always this outdoorsy person,” said Joshi. But, given his humble background in a lower-middle-class family, he was always more concerned with excelling in school in order to secure a solid living. At age 15 — just after he completed 10th grade — he had already started his own business, assembling and selling computers, while pursuing a degree in IT engineering. 

“There were a group of doctors who became my clients, then my friends,” said Joshi. “They were also avid trekkers and, one day, took me on a hike to a nearby sanctuary.”

That first visit to the 85-square-kilometer Tungareshwar Wildlife Sanctuary — where he still regularly trains today — was what began his love affair with the outdoors. He started training and learning about wilderness survival and, after borrowing his doctor friends’ gear, completed his first Himalayan trek in 2014. By age 18, he had made it his goal to climb Everest. He wasn’t sure when it would happen; he just knew he couldn’t do it if he went for his MBA in the U.S. like he had originally planned. 

“I would rather work toward climbing Everest. I knew it would teach me more about life,” he said. “I realized adventure travel is a much richer and better learning experience.” 

He decided, before furthering any career plans, Everest would come first.  

Mission Mount Everest Starts…Then Stalls 

Over the next several years — between 2014 and 2019 — he completed nine separate month-long courses in outdoors and mountaineering, developed and committed to a rigorous training regime, honed his skills on other challenging Himalayan mountains and also worked as a mountaineering guide in Ladakh. He began fundraising and set his Everest expedition — which he named Sangharsh Mission Mount Everest (“sangharsh” translating to “challenges” in Sanskrit) — for the 2020 spring climbing season. 

Unfortunately, it would be canceled on account of the pandemic.  

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“For two months in lockdown, I couldn’t run or go outside,” said Joshi. “I thought, ‘Oh no, what if I have an existential crisis?’”  

What helped was channeling his energy into a different goal: training for, self-organizing and completing his first triathlon. On October 10 — a date he selected because it was World Mental Health Day — he completed the 70.3-mile venture from Palghar within eight hours. 

Conquering Everest Despite Another COVID Curveball

Flash-forward to spring of 2021 and Joshi’s Everest expedition was back on. But, on May 8, after a month of patiently waiting at base camp and mere hours of setting off for the summit, he tested positive for COVID-19 (confirmed by two rapid antigen tests). 

“I thought ‘I cannot give up right away and go down: I am acclimated to this altitude, Katmandu is in a bad state, I have extra supplemental oxygen,” he said.

Asymptomatic and fully vaccinated, he elected to isolate in his tent for 11 days, reminding those who questioned him that he had Global Rescue, and, if he had even the smallest complication, he wouldn’t hesitate to utilize the emergency rescue. 

After 10 days of isolation, he was testing negative and the emergency care unit at base camp that had been monitoring his breathing cleared him to continue his expedition. The weather window came on May 19, and, that night, he and his two high-altitude guides, Furte Sherpa and Anup Rai, set off for the summit. 

His original plans were to scale Everest, then Lhotse — which would make him the first Indian to complete that traverse — but the team decided to switch the order since Everest’s neighbor would have fewer climbers. By May 21, he had reached Camp 3. This would have been where he went for Lhotse, but with the weather window closing due to a second cyclone, he had to make the tough decision to scrap Lhotse altogether and simply go for Everest.  

[Related Reading:
A Mount Everest Evacuation for “The Cuban Mountaineer]

Despite 50-mile-per-hour winds, on May 22 at 9:40 p.m., the team made their way from Camp 4 to the summit. “It was very uncomfortable,” said Joshi. “It felt like we were in a blender that was on the moon.”  

At 6:40 a.m. the next day, they reached the summit. While the celebration was short — only 15 minutes as the weather was worsening and Joshi was growing more sleep-deprived by the minute — he was grateful for getting his chance and making it.  

“We were on a time bomb this year,” he said. “Many good people had to retreat. I’m thankful I didn’t have to.” 

Scaling Mountains Sustainably to Promote Solar Power

Harshvardhan-Joshi-solar-panels

The other feature setting Joshi’s Everest mission apart was the way in which he did it: powered completely by solar energy to bring attention to clean, renewable energy. It’s a cause he can relate to: He’s seen the effects of climate change firsthand during his time in Ladakh, as well as witnessed how many remote villages in the Himalayas lack electricity.

“Without electricity, these people lose at least 12 hours of their life a day. It deprives them of education, health care and communication, keeping them in poverty,” said Joshi.

“Solar, renewable energy can solve problems not just related to climate change but also on a socio-economic front.” 

During his Everest expedition, he took three 40-watt solar panels with a battery system to power base camp; a smaller, portable system, which he hoofed up to Camp 2 (6,400 meters/21,000 feet); then, finally, he carried a solar-charged power bank until the final camp in the “death zone” at 8,000 meters. 

After he reached the summit, Joshi donated the solar panels used during the expedition to local Nepalese villages that do not have electricity. He was also able to give additional donated panels to power 10 homes in some of the most remote regions of the Himalayas: Turtuk and Ladakh in India, the Makalu region in Nepal and a school in the village of Dharharwa in Bihar. 

“The message I want to spread: If we can stay solar for two months in one of the most hostile environments on Earth, imagine where else we can bring this technology and what wonders it can do?” 

What’s Next for the Mountaineer from Mumbai

While his Everest expedition is complete, Joshi is hardly resting on his laurels. He’s currently working on a book, studying for the GMAT, spending as much time in his local outdoors as he can and forming plans to move to the U.S., which he calls his next “Everest.” There’s also a documentary about him in the works which should premiere sometime in spring of 2022 (see the trailer here).  

Of course, he’s still chasing new mountaineering goals, including promoting mountain climbing among people of color and attempting two more big Himalayan mountains in the fall of 2022 (as for which ones, he is keeping that under wraps for now). 

“My long-term goal is to create awareness about safety in the mountains, making adventure sports more accessible and sustainable,” he said. “I’m happy to have come across organizations like Global Rescue who share in that same mission.”