Funding & Investment in Travel
One in six holidaymakers admit to hiding health issues when buying travel insurance | Travel News | Travel
One in six holidaymakers confess to not being entirely truthful about their health when securing travel insurance. The study reveals that a quarter of holidaymakers have travelled without insurance all together, while a fifth have knowingly travelled without full coverage from their policy.
The report indicates that a quarter of holidaymakers believe it’s acceptable to withhold information about a non-serious health condition to obtain a cheaper policy. Some felt the need to reduce holiday expenses, while others omitted health details because they only wanted basic cover for cancellations or luggage.
A spokesperson from Staysure, the company behind the research, said: “This survey paints a worrying picture.”
“When buying a travel insurance policy, you want to know you’ll be in safe hands if the worst should happen so be as honest and detailed as possible about your current health.”
Most travellers were unaware that weight loss medications and HRT, a drug used to alleviate menopause symptoms, must be disclosed.
Furthermore, a quarter of holidaymakers do not think it is necessary to disclose high blood pressure, recent surgery, or past severe organ conditions or heart attacks.
“Many people don’t realise that their NHS medical records are checked when they make a medical claim to verify their policy against their current health,” said the spokesperson.
“Any undeclared medical conditions, or recent GP and hospital visits that are not covered on their policy could invalidate their cover – leaving them high and dry to foot a medical bill alone.”
Seven in ten said their biggest fear was having their claim declined and being stuck abroad with a medical bill they can’t afford, with some even aware of someone who had a medical claim declined because they had not disclosed a health condition beforehand.
The spokesperson added: “Declaring all your medical conditions ensures you are financially protected if you need medical treatment abroad or repatriating home – last year the average cost of an air ambulance from Spain alone was £45,136.”
Of those polled 81 percent agreed that their travel insurance was worth the money with 26 percent having had to make a claim in the past.
“We urge people to tell their insurer if they’ve recently seen a medical professional as not all heath changes will increase the price of their policy but may just save them thousands of pounds in unexpected medical costs.”
TOP 10 CONDITIONS TRAVELLERS DIDN’T REALISE YOU HAVE TO DECLARE:
- Menopause/HRT
- Weight loss drugs
- Hearing problems
- Arthritis
- Osteoarthritis
- Recent GP or hospital visits
- Chronic back pain
- Thyroid Issues
- Changes in health/medication alterations
- Mental health conditions
Funding & Investment in Travel
Bob Davis funeral draws a who’s who of Volusia leaders for hotel icon
Bob Davis extols the value of hospitality workers in Daytona Beach
Bob Davis, president and CEO of the Lodging & Hospitality Association of Volusia County, touts the value of hospitality workers in Daytona Beach.
- Bob Davis, a longtime leader in the Volusia County hotel and tourism industry, passed away at 87 after a two-year battle with cancer.
- A funeral service was held on July 18th at Lohman Funeral Home, attended by community leaders, colleagues, and those whose lives he touched.
- Davis was remembered for his dedication to community service, mentorship, and advocacy for education and literacy.
PORT ORANGE — Longtime Volusia County hotel leader Bob Davis was remembered for a work ethic, compassion and energy that extended far beyond the hospitality industry at a visitation and funeral service on Friday, July 18, at Lohman Funeral Home.
In closing remarks of an hourlong service, Rabbi Naisoff Mendel urged a standing-room crowd in the funeral home’s chapel to honor Davis and his legacy of community service by continuing his dedication to education, literacy and other issues close to his heart.
“Make the world a better place, a more loving place, a more caring place,” Mendel said. “Find one thing you can do, one good deed that you can do today, and say, ‘I do this for Bob.’”
Davis, the devoted and colorful longtime patriarch of the destination’s hotel and tourism industry for nearly 60 years, died on Sunday, July 13, following a two-year battle with cancer.
He was 87.
Davis funeral attended by Volusia tourism, business, elected leaders
On Friday, a steady stream of mourners arrived throughout the two-hour gathering, ranging from well-known hospitality, business and government leaders to rank-and-file hotel workers who owed their careers to belief in their potential initially expressed by Davis.
The latter applied to Pierre Louis, who stopped at several points to blink back tears as he shared a story during the funeral service about how the seeds for his 30-year Marine Corps career were planted when he went to work as a 16-year-old dishwasher at the Hawaiian Inn when Davis was the hotel’s general manager.
“He always taught me about responsibility, and I never forgot that,” said Louis, standing in front of the white coffin decorated with a framed photo of Davis and his beloved New York Mets baseball jersey on top.
“He said, ‘Never ever, ever forget, you can do anything that you set your mind to do.’”
The public visitation was followed by a private burial service at Mt. Sinai Cemetery in Daytona Beach.
Among those on hand to pay their respects were Volusia County Council members Matt Reinhart and David Santiago, Volusia Sheriff Mike Chitwood and former Daytona Beach Mayor Larry Kelly, who served for 12 consecutive terms from 1974-1993, as well as a long list of area hotel executives, tourism and business leaders.
During the service, Santiago, attired in a New York Mets jersey, regaled the crowd with tales of Davis dancing up a storm at a Deltona community event. He then turned serious:
“He (Davis) was a true advocate,” he said, “and it wasn’t just about hotels. It was community. He was a true servant.”
Davis remembered as Volusia ‘institution’ never too busy to help
Before the service, others offered similar tales of how Davis had inspired and uplifted the community since arriving in Daytona Beach from upstate New York in 1966.
“His impact was personal to me,” said Androse Bell, a Bethune-Cookman University graduate and former general manager at Daytona’s Hard Rock Hotel who now works as general manager of Brightline’s Orlando station.
“As a hospitality student, he was somebody I could call on to get an authentic mentorship, which was unique for someone in my position as a student at B-CU.”
It was a scenario that Bell would see repeated many times with other students.
“That was the thing about Bob. He was never too big to help, whether you are the housekeeper at a hotel, a student or a general manager.”
Nearby, former Volusia County Council member and longtime community advocate Pat Northey echoed that sentiment, based on her own experiences.
“Bob is an institution in Volusia County,” Northey said. “When I started in government in the 1990s, he guided many of us on navigating important issues. Plus, he was simply one of the kindest men I’ve ever known, a dear friend. I will miss him and his emails.”
Longtime Volusia County educator and former School Board member Carl Persis recalled meeting Davis in 1981 and being amazed by his ability to get things done.
“He was such an advocate of public schools,” Persis said. “I’ve never known anyone who was more persistent, more determined. When he set a goal, get out of his way. He was going to make it happen. He was an inspiration to me because he never quit.”
To honor Davis, mourners vow to continue his good work
Looking ahead, those who will cherish his memory vow to build on that momentum, said John Betros, who served with Davis as chairman of the Lodging & Hospitality Association of Volusia County.
“The world, our community and our industry has lost a very good man,” Betros said during the service, choking back tears. “But we’re going to carry on his legacy.”
Funding & Investment in Travel
Inside Playa Grande Beach Club, A Boutique Hotel Reimagining Travel to the Dominican Republic
One of Playa Grande Beach Club’s nine standalone villas.
Playa Grande Beach Club
Few destinations do an over-the-top beach vacation like the Dominican Republic. As all-inclusive travel grows in popularity even with the youngest generation of travelers, this Caribbean nation is drawing record-breaking numbers of travelers year-round, many of whom head straight to the island’s oversized resorts.
Beachfront development has long since pushed past the sugar-fine sands of Punta Cana and into new regions, with big-name hotels and resorts sprouting up in spots that were once known mostly to locals. Notably, the country’s first luxury wellness resort, Cayo Levantado Resort, debuted two years ago on a private island in the less-visited region of Samaná.
Meanwhile, the once tiny beach town of Miches is buzzing; Viva Miches by Wyndham, A Trademark All-Inclusive debuted in January, while Zemi Miches Punta Cana All-Inclusive Resort, Curio Collection by Hilton opening its doors less than a month ago.
The less-visited north shore of the Dominican Republic is home to some of the country’s few boutique hotels and resorts.
Playa Grande Beach Club
Now On the North Shore
A mere blip on the map of the Dominican Republic, the area surrounding the small town of Rio San Juan is nearly untouched, even when compared to still growing destinations like Samaná or Miches. But zoom in on Google Maps and you’ll start to see the appeal of this less-visited region: brilliantly white stretches of sand stretch right up to the lush foliage of the tropical jungle. This couldn’t feel further from Punta Cana, but with beaches that are just as nice.
Amidst the larger-than-life developments of other coastlines, the properties here are tiny in comparison. Small, serene, and supremely exclusive, properties like the Aman-branded Amanera and ÀNI Dominican Republic, are quietly rewriting the narrative of the travel to the Dominican Republic as being limited to the oversized and overwhelming.
Even more special still is nearby Playa Grande Beach Club, a boutique property the likes of which there are few in the country, let alone the Caribbean. Home to just nine standalone bungalows spread across a spacious swath of beachfront property carved out of the jungle, its one-of-a-kind design and down-to-earth luxury make it a world all its own.
Celerie Kembel-designed Playa Grande Beach Club.
Playa Grande Beach Club
Inside Playa Grande Beach Club
Stepping off the golden sands of one of the country’s most beautiful beaches and onto the manicured grounds of Playa Grande Beach Club, it’s immediately clear that this is a destination all its own. Even from the beachfront, it’s visible: the property’s meticulously maintained grounds are packed with details to delight visitors. Fringed umbrellas shade beach chairs; vintage furniture fills spaces coated with colorful, handmade tiles; candy-colored drinking glasses for afternoon piña coladas by the pool look like they’re straight out of a doll house.
Playa Grande Beach Club’s praiseworthy design comes as no surprise to those who know its founding story. Among the property’s owners is Celerie Kemble, a renowned designer who had a hand in every detail of its creation and design.
Her distinctly island-inspired, Palm Beach-informed design touches every corner of the property. Each bungalow evokes its own unique spirit, with colorful pastel palettes paired with one-of-a-kind textiles and art collected from remote corners of the world, including from Kemble’s personal travels. The Dominican inspiration of the property is undeniable, calling on classic, colonial-era design in architectural details throughout.
Each bungalow at Playa Grande Beach Club is unique crafted and includes handpicked pieces of furniture, art, and decor.
Playa Grande Beach Club
To step inside your private bungalow, available in one-bedroom, two-bedroom, and three-bedroom layouts, feels like stepping inside a gingerbread house with a tropical twist. Mine mixed a rose and lime green color scheme, that started with the handpicked textiles on pillows and continue to the tiles spread across the bathroom floor. My bungalow had its own kitchen, with a vintage-inspired refrigerator stocked with goodies like Dominican beer, local mangoes and freshly-ground coffee should I want to wake for sunrise on the sand.
The bathroom was its own separate sanctuary, complete with a massive copper soaking tub as the centerpiece of its design. I marveled at its size: how could the floor hold its weight? Did the house have to be built around its oversized port? It was one of a number of supremely special touches that wove together the visceral visual journey at this one-of-a-kind property.
Bungalows each come with kitchens, making it an ideal destination for a longer-term stay.
Playa Grande Beach Club
Home Away From Home
The intentionality of every design detail is Kemble’s love for the property made manifest, giving it lived-in, well-loved quality that makes it comfortable rather than imposing. Perhaps it’s the small size of the property, apt for less than thirty guests at a time, that enhances its homey feel. However, the family-and-friends-first founding of the property is even more likely the source of its welcoming vibe.
While Kemble was the creative mind behind the property’s design, she was just one of a close-knit group of owners who initially intentioned Playa Grande Beach Club to be a private destination reserved just for friends and family. Now, guests can book bungalows for their own home-away-from-home feel.
In addition to just nine bungalows, Playa Grande Beach Club has a main house with a restaurant and bar, a two-story library and lounge, a beachfront pool with a covered lounge area for lazing, and a small gym.
Rio San Juan and Beyond
For such a set-apart property far from the tourist crowds, there’s surprisingly plenty to do just outside the bounds of the resort. One morning I ventured out with a guide who led me up a mountainside that stands between the coastline and the expanses of the island, cracking open fresh coconuts, pointing out tropical fruit laden trees, and explaining the rich vegetation along our trek.
At the end of the path was an incredible viewpoint overlooking the island’s north coast, from which he pointed out the area’s best beaches and departures for the area’s other popular excursions: horseback riding, tours through the forest to swim in millennia-old sinkholes and boat rides through the mangroves.
“Why would anyone want to leave such a precious property?” I had thought, until I realized that I would need to plan a return trip to experience everything there is to do in this still largely untouched region of the country.
Playa Grande Beach Club’s elegant main house, home to the property’s lounge space, bar and restaurant.
Playa Grande Beach Club
The Playa Grande Secret
There is plenty to do during a stay at Playa Grande Beach Club, but noticeable absent is the laundry list of amenities that often feel like a to-do list to modern travelers. Here, the luxury is in the space, the solitude, the stretch of sand that feels almost all your own. It is the serenity of dining in the grand, romantic main house, chatting with friends and family over farm-fresh food highlighting island-inspired flavors.
“The biggest benefit of staying at Playa Grande Beach Club is that you feel like you are in a family,” says Alexandra Jeronimo, General Manager of Playa Grande Beach Club.
“The hotel is a timeless place from yesteryear where generational stories are made,” she says, referencing both the intimate feel of the property and high return rate of guests. At this boutique property, bungalows sometimes book up to a year in advance by guests who don’t want to skip a season at Playa Grande.
It’s a destination to be shared with friends and family, but carefully. “A lot of visitors tend to say things like ‘I don’t know if I should tell anyone about this place, so I’ve decided to tell no one so I can keep it for myself,'” says Jeronimo. After all, what started as a hideaway for a group of close friends and family never lost its essence. Now, it that same sublime peace and welcoming spirit that makes Playa Grande Beach Club such a singular slice of paradise.
Funding & Investment in Travel
Jim Thorpe bank to close downtown location to make space for tourists at train station
Mauch Chunk Trust Company’s bank in downtown Jim Thorpe will close at the end of the year to make space for tourists.
The branch is located inside the borough’s historic train station, which houses the Jim Thorpe Visitors Center.
Out-of-towners who come for a train ride, take a jaunt on the adjacent trail or to visit the shops in town stop at the station to use the restroom and seek tourism information from the Pocono Mountain Visitors Bureau.
Closing the branch will make more space for the estimated 400,000 guests who stop by in a year, according to a press release.
The decision to close the branch was made in partnership with the Carbon County Commissioners to better accommodate the crowds.
Haley O’Brien
/
WVIA News
In the announcement, Patrick H. Reilly, President and CEO of Mauch Chunk Trust said, “As tourism in Jim Thorpe has grown over the years, we’ve seen many of our railroad station customers increasingly using our North Street and other offices because they are easier to access and have better parking.”
Reilly also said more customers have been using their mobile app for banking.
The Lehigh Gorge Scenic Railway has trains departing the station several times daily during the busy seasons.
The county currently pays for portable restrooms to accommodate the hundreds of thousands of people that visit each year.
“No concrete plans have been made yet,” Commissioner Wayne Nothstein said Friday, but added that renovating the station to add more restrooms has been part of the conversation.
Mauch Chunk Trust has seven locations in Carbon County and Tamaqua. The bank’s main office on North Street is on Jim Thorpe’s East Side.
The train station branch downtown will close on Dec. 1, 2025. An ATM will remain outside the building.
Haley O’Brien
/
WVIA News
-
The Travel Revolution of Our Era3 weeks ago
‘AI is undeniably reshaping the core structure of the hospitality ecosystem’: Venu G Somineni
-
Brand Stories1 week ago
The Smart Way to Stay: How CheQin.AI Is Flipping Hotel Booking in Your Favor
-
Brand Stories2 weeks ago
Voice AI Startup ElevenLabs Plans to Add Hubs Around the World
-
Mergers & Acquisitions1 week ago
Amazon weighs further investment in Anthropic to deepen AI alliance
-
Mergers & Acquisitions1 week ago
How Elon Musk’s rogue Grok chatbot became a cautionary AI tale
-
Asia Travel Pulse2 weeks ago
Looking For Adventure In Asia? Here Are 7 Epic Destinations You Need To Experience At Least Once – Zee News
-
Mergers & Acquisitions1 week ago
UK crime agency arrests 4 people over cyber attacks on retailers
-
AI in Travel2 weeks ago
‘Will AI take my job?’ A trip to a Beijing fortune-telling bar to see what lies ahead | China
-
Mergers & Acquisitions2 weeks ago
ChatGPT — the last of the great romantics
-
Mergers & Acquisitions1 week ago
EU pushes ahead with AI code of practice
You must be logged in to post a comment Login