Blood Pressure Normalized – Mumbai attack dents business travel – Yahoo! News
March 15, 2010
Mumbai attack dents business travel – Yahoo! News
MUMBAI, India – John Fesko came to Mumbai to talk with an Indian pharmaceutical company about manufacturing two high blood pressure drugs his Swiss biotech firm is developing. He went home with a bullet in his leg.
“I thought I had glass in my leg,” the American said by phone from Basel, Switzerland, just after his doctor extracted the bullet.
Fesko was one of the lucky ones: He survived the 60-hour rampage by Islamic militants in India’s financial capital, which claimed 171 lives.
He has three new rules to live by: Always carry your passport. Keep at least one credit card on you. Avoid five star hotels in poor countries.
The Nov. 26 to Nov. 29 terror attacks dealt a further blow to India’s business travel industry, which has been suffering from the global economic slowdown for months. Occupancy rates in south Mumbai’s five-star hotels, frequented by business travelers like Fesko, are down by about a third since the siege, according to the Hotel Association of India.
Few predict terror alone will derail business travel to India for the long haul. But as corporate travelers limp back, they are asking tough questions about security, demanding that high-profile hotels prove they have measures in place to deflect violence. Those demands, fueled by a still-palpable fear, are forcing the city’s top hotels to rethink the delicate balance between security and hospitality.
The Association of Corporate Travel Executives, a U.S. nonprofit group, surveyed 134 corporate travel managers after the Mumbai attacks. They found that just 6 percent planned to curtail travel to the region, but 78 percent were reviewing their hotel contracts with a greater emphasis on security.
“Companies are going to continue to send people all around the world,” said Susan Gurley, the group’s executive director. Still, “the onus is going to be much more on hotels proving to corporations that their security is up to date.”
Companies are asking the hotels they deal with to coordinate better with police, fire and military authorities, train staff in evacuation techniques, install back-up communication systems in guest rooms, and improve surveillance, she said.
Such aggressive security measures come with both financial and psychological costs.
“People want to feel safe, but they don’t want to feel like they are in an armed camp,” Gurley said.
Luxury hotels across Mumbai have added metal detectors, more stringent bag searches, bomb-sniffing dogs and vehicle searches. Some are considering staff training on what to do in case of a terrorist attack, and the government has posted armed police and soldiers at top hotels in Mumbai, New Delhi and Kolkata.
Varun Satish, the assistant to the director of security at the Four Seasons hotel in Mumbai, said security officers from corporate clients have descended on the hotel since the attack. “We’ve had a security audit like every second day,” he said.
“Hospitality is going to change,” he said. “Guests ask, ‘Is it going to be like checking in at the airport?’”
“It’s the budget that’s going to go up big time,” he added. “We don’t mind. It’s only going to make things more secure.”
Dinesh Chauhan, Asia-Pacific travel manager for Philips Electronics NV, helps oversee a 300 million euro ($404 million) annual travel budget for more than 60,000 employees worldwide.
He said Philips already asks the hotels it deals with to meet certain minimum security requirements — like restricting access for non-guests and ensuring fire safety — but is working to improve things like monitoring staff location.
Philips lifted its ban on travel to Mumbai on Dec. 4, five days after the attacks ended. And it has reopened its Mumbai office, which was closed for two days.
Many other companies also have lifted their travel restrictions and pledged to move ahead with business as usual in India, one of Asia’s fastest-growing economies.
Priya Paul, president of the Hotel Association of India, said she expects business travel to resume normal levels in January.
“People are giving it a little time to settle down,” she said.
Part of the Oberoi and the new wing of the Taj hotel — both targets of the terrorist attacks — plan to reopen Dec. 21. It’s too early to tell whether loyalty or fear will dominate and how quickly the business community will return to its two favorite haunts.
Pradeep Udhas, a managing director at Greater Pacific Capital Pvt Ltd, a private equity firm, said his firm is considering sending people to more humble lodging than the Taj or Oberoi from now on.
“We have to be judicious and not take undo risks for our people,” he said. “But if we don’t continue with our business, that’s what these terrorists want.”
Fesko, the chief executive of biotech company Renuvia Pharmaceuticals LLC who is back home recuperating in Switzerland, said he would probably return to India and continue talks with Cipla Ltd. — and probably would avoid staying in expensive hotels. But his voice is heavy with hesitation.
He and his girlfriend, Dara Huang, survived the gunbattle at Leopold’s, a tourist bar targeted in the attack, ducking bullets and exploding glasses, to flee through the dark, still streets to their hotel, the Taj Mahal Palace & Tower.
Fesko’s arms and legs were covered with cuts and he was wet with a stranger’s blood.
Minutes after they sat down amid the warm, sweeping marble of the Taj lobby, they heard gunfire again. They ducked into a nearby restaurant, where they waited out the night, praying and listening to the sound of guns, grenades, and the terrifying roar of an approaching fire.
“You see that with your own eyes, and you think it’s a miracle you are alive,” Fesko said. “I know Dara would be scared if I went back.”
Acupuncture To Treat High Blood Pressure
Since ancient times, acupuncture is known to be an effective treatment for treating high blood pressure in human beings. High blood pressure is a situation where the blood starts exerting pressure against the walls of the veins, arteries and several chambers of the heart. Over an extended period of time, this heavy pressure of blood begins to damage the lining of the blood vessels. The situation could also lead to arteriosclerosis, the condition that causes the hardening of the arteries.
The symptoms of high blood pressure are often acute in all human beings. They consist of flushed faces, immediate dizziness, painful headaches, difficult breathing, restlessness, nose bleeding, nervousness, depression, bad temper, insomnia, emotional instability and intestinal complaints. The high blood pressure is diagnosed as soon as the normal pressure begins to rise repeatedly. The other corporeal symptoms of blood pressure include the decrease of muscle strength, weaker eye vision as well as the tendency to urinate frequently.
Acupuncture treatments along with electric stimulation can decrease the lower elevations of high blood pressure in human beings. There was a research conducted where the acupuncture needles were inserted on the inside of the forearm or merely above the wrist. Electric current was then being passed through these needles and lower frequencies of such electric stimulation reduced the blood pressure successfully. Another research on acupuncture treatment showed that the needles inserted would excite the brain cells and causes them to release ‘feel-good’ chemicals known as neurotransmitters. These chemicals often increase the heart related activities.
In order to cure blood pressure, several needles are inserted on the forearm; wrist or legs, so as to excite the opioid chemicals located in the brain and lessen the excitatory activities of the cardiovascular systems. Such a decrease in the heart activities and increase in the need for oxygen can reduce the blood pressure greatly. It also helps in healing some of the other heart-related ailments such as myocardial ischemia and hypertension.
At the time of going through acupuncture treatments to cure high blood pressure, some of the other herbs such as Gastrodia Rhizome, Shan Za or Prunella could be used to reduce blood pressure. The juices of these herbs s
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hould be injected in order to achieve better results. A unique acupuncture treatment for high blood pressure would also involve the pressing of your skin on the palm between the index finger and the thumb. Acupuncture is available with a range of different variations and is successful on all the patients with hypertension. Unlike the existing myth, the pricking of needles is not painful and the goal of this treatment is to benefit everyone suffering from high blood pressure and other cardiac disorders.
By: Gagan Deep….
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Uptown Acupuncture, Is an Acupuncture San Diego Clinic which Provide Specializes in Physical Therapy and Holistic Healing in San Diego
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