Categories: Uncategorized

Jamaica Cares Travel Insurance to Launch in November

Beginning next month Jamaica will offer “Jamaica Cares,” an “end-to-end” travel insurance plan providing visitors with emergency medical and crisis response services via a “public-private partnership” with insurance provider Global Rescue, said Edmund Bartlett, Jamaica’s tourism minister.

All non-Jamaican passport holders will be required to purchase the insurance, which Bartlett said will cost $40 per person. Policies will cover services including “case management, transport logistics, field rescue, evacuation and repatriation for medical emergencies including COVID-19, along with crises including natural disasters,” said officials at a Monday Zoom briefing on the program.

ADVERTISING

PHOTO: “Assurance is becoming a critical precondition of travel today.” – Edmund Bartlett. (photo by Brian Major)

Plans include international health coverage up to $100,000 for visitors traveling to and from Jamaica and on-island health coverage up to $50,000. The program combines Global Rescue’s emergency services with domestic and international travel medical insurance, said Jamaica officials.

Trending Now

The compulsory fee will be included as part of the country’s online Travel Authorization application, approval of which will enroll travelers in the program. The program’s major components include an “all hazards” component covering field rescue, emergency transport and oversight services from personnel at Global Rescue and other partners.

Global Rescue has partnered with Jamaican hospitals for local treatment and will provide medical evacuation for travelers who require a higher level of care, said Dan Richards, the company’s CEO.

Richards said the “all hazards” component provides evacuation, logistics and response for travelers in need of medical support following “systemic” crises including natural disasters and terrorism.

The plan’s COVID-19 specific services include rapid testing and triage for symptomatic travelers, treatment, associated care and access to Global Care personnel in Jamaica, Richards said.

“Travelers want to know they are better prepared in the event of a medical emergency or a natural disaster,” said Dr. Taleb Rifai, co-chair of the Global Tourism Resilience Crisis Management Centre, which is administering the program. “Agents and operators will see the Jamaica Cares program as the gold standard to restore traveler confidence and rebuild bookings.”

“COVID-19 has changed the world and the travel industry,” said Bartlett. “The International Monetary Fund late last week said the impact of COVID-19 on the Caribbean has been massive particularly for tourism-dependent countries.”

At the same time, today’s leisure travelers, whom Bartlett labeled “Generation C,” require “much more in terms of security and safety in a destination,” he said. “Assurance is becoming a critical precondition of travel today.”

This post was published by our news partner: TravelPulse.com | Article Source
TJS News

TravelPulse.com, part of the travAlliancemedia network of products, is the leading resource for the latest travel news, offers, and videos. Since 2002, TravelPulse.com has been delivering industry news, dynamic video content and important supplier and destination information that have allowed hundreds of thousands of travel agents to succeed. Now, with dedicated consumer content, TravelPulse is once again revolutionizing the way that travel content is consumed.

Recent Posts

Man with Fake Boarding Pass Boards United Flight, Exposing Major Security Failures

A Houston man with a fake boarding pass boarded a United Airlines flight at George…

3 days ago

NTSB Report: United Jet Struck Light Pole, Not Truck, Near Newark Airport

The National Transportation Safety Board released new details Thursday about a United flight that hit…

4 days ago

Thousands Face Career Uncertainty After Spirit Airlines Shutdown

The Spirit Airlines shutdown has left thousands of former employees scrambling for work. In an…

5 days ago

Southwest Reversed Its Controversial Plus-Size Seat Policy After 4 Months of Backlash

Southwest Airlines reversed its controversial plus-size seat policy, no longer requiring plus-size passengers to buy…

2 weeks ago

Summer Travel Preview

We’re just days away from Memorial Day Weekend — the unofficial start to summer travel…

2 weeks ago

FAA Seeks $165K Fine Against Alaska Airlines Over Intoxicated Passengers on Flights

The Federal Aviation Administration proposed a civil penalty of $165,000 against Alaska Airlines for allegedly…

2 weeks ago