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Home » Article » Travel-and-Leisure Travel Health: Useful medical information for good health before your departure, during your trip and after your return.
Eddy De Vos filed under "Travel-and-Leisure"
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The diseases most commonly seen in travellers are diarrhoea,
malaria (if you travel in a malaria-infested area), accidents
(when travelling by car or swimming), wound infections and
sexually transmitted diseases.
- Diarrhoea is caused by contaminated food and drinking-water.
You must therefore be careful if your are travelling in poor
hygiene conditions.
- Malaria is transmitted by mosquitoes, so the first thing to do
is to protect yourself against these mosquitoes.
- In order to prevent accidents during travelling, it is wise to
apply the same precautions as those taken at home. In addition,
it is very important that all wounds should be thoroughly
disinfected in order to avoid infection.
·TRAVELLER’S DIARRHOEA
Many intestinal infections are attributable to infections picked
up by mouth or hands. With a little care most of these illnesses
can be prevented. Hepatitis A, typhoid fever, polio and cholera
still occur in countries with poor hygiene, but these diseases
are easily prevented.
However, the chance is rather large that you will still contract
a light and/or nondangerous form of traveller's diarrhoea.
Traveller's diarrhoea almost always spontaneously clears up
after a few days, but can nevertheless be irritating. And a risk
to your overall and travel health.
In the first place measures must be taken against dehydration.
Likewise, treatment of the symptoms must be considered in order
to reduce the number of bowel movements and relieve other
symptoms such as fever, vomiting and stomach cramps. Sometimes a
more serious form of diarrhoea occurs, for which specific
treatment with antibiotics is indicated or where hospitalisation
or fluid replacement appears unavoidable.
It takes only a few basic preventive measures to make your trip
a success : Total prevention of traveller's diarrhoea is
impossible and it is obvious that preventive measures can seldom
be strictly followed at all times. But following preventive
measures do significantly reduce the risk of contracting serious
diarrhoea: In order to maintain good travel health wash your
hands before eating and avoid (if possible) :
- raw vegetables and fruits that you have not peeled yourself -
uncooked or unpasteurized dairy products - insufficiently cooked
sea foods (+ Hepatitis A !) and meat - “local meals” which do
not smell fresh - ice-cream bought from street merchants
(industrial ice straight from the deep-freeze is probably safe).
Cooked meals should be served hot. The place where you eat is
also important. A meal taken from a stall presents a greater
risk than a meal taken in a restaurant. Avoid restaurants where
there are a lot of insects. Avoid tap water and ice-cubes.
Bottled water and soft drinks are safe. Watch out for bottle
caps that have already been used. It is very important to
disinfect drinking-water on adventure trips. Total sterilisation
of drinking water is impossible. The following measures
considerably reduce the contamination risk and safeguard your
travel health:
- Boiling the water is very effective. - A good alternative is
chemical disinfection with chlorine drops (e.g. Hadex®,
Drinkwell chloor®; available in sport shops specialized in
outdoor activities) or chlorine tablets (Certisil Combina®;
chloramine tablets; available at the pharmacy). Their effect can
be improved by first filtering unclear water. Silver salts
(Micropur®, Certisil Argento®) are not very suitable to
disinfect water, but they keep disinfected water germ-free for a
long time.
For adventurous travellers conscious to travel health it is best
to buy a portable water-filter. The use of antibiotics in order
to prevent diarrhoea before it occurs can be dangerous + Also
the use of other preventive medications is not recommended.
.How to treat diarrhoea?
It is extremely important to consume sufficient liquid and salt
in order to prevent dehydration. You can do this by taking salt
solutions, but tea with lemon, broth, soft drinks and fruit
juice, supplemented with salt crackers are tastier. Commercial
salt products are available on the market (ORS-solution).
Taking an anti-diarrhoea preparation (loperamide, e.g. Imodium®)
can greatly reduce the number of bowel movements, with a
considerable reduction of the complaints as a result. Imodium®
may only be used by adults and older children and only for
treating ordinary watery diarrhoea: 1 capsule after every loose
movement up to a maximum of 4 per day.
Antibiotics are indicated :
1. If blood, mucus or pus are present in the stools. 2. If after
24 to 48 hours, there is no sign of improvement and the
diarrhoea is accompanied by fever (above 38.5 C) or severe
abdominal cramps, or if there are more than six stools per 24
hours and especially when these also occur at night. 3. Or if
because of travel circumstances a quicker solution is absolutely
desirable . Appropriate antibiotics are only to be used on
doctor’s prescription
·SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES Casual sexual contacts tend to be
higher while on holiday abroad. Sexually transmitted diseases,
particularly AIDS, form therefore an important risk for
travellers. Quite often unintentional and unsafe sexual contact
takes place under alcohol influence. Prevention while on holiday
abroad is no different from the precautions you take at home.
Adequate use of a condom, preferably bought at home, is
absolutely essential. Only a water-soluble lubricant should be
used, but it only offers a partial guarantee (e.g. KY gel).
Vaccination against hepatitis B is advised. Always consult your
doctor if you think you are at risk, even when there are no
symptoms.
·MALARIA (swamp fever, malaria)
Malaria is an infectious disease caused by a parasite (called
Plasmodium) transmitted by the bite of the Anopheles mosquito.
There are four different types of which Malaria falciparum is
the most dangerous and the most widespread. The incubation
period – the time between an infecting bite and the appearance
of the disease – varies from ten days to four weeks (rarely
several months).
The symptoms include attacks of fever, but can initially be
quite similar to influenza. If adequate treatment is not started
in time, an attack may sometimes result in death within a few
days.
. Where does malaria occur?
Malaria only occurs in those areas in which Anopheles mosquitoes
are present : in the tropics and in a large number of
subtropical areas. From a height of 1.500 to 2.500 m onwards,
depending on temperature and climate, Anopheles mosquitoes are
either rare or non-existent.
In most big cities there is little or no risk at all of
infection, except in Africa where a real risk exists.
Risk also exists in the suburbs of the big cities in Asia (e.g.
in India). In a number of areas the risk varies according to the
season.
. How can malaria be prevented?
It is very important for travel health to avoid mosquito bites :
the Anopheles mosquito only bites between dusk and dawn, is
rather small and hardly makes any noise. - In the evening wear
light-coloured clothing which covers your arms and legs as much
as possible. Apply repellent cream with a DEET basis (20 to 50%,
for children and pregnant women preferably 20 to 30%) to the
uncovered parts of your body. Repeat this every four to six
hours (it will not protect you all night). Non containing DEET
repellents were less examined; Autan-Active. and Mosegor. are
however excellent safe products. - Sleep in rooms that leave no
access to mosquitoes, (mosquito nets on the sills,
electrically-warmed anti-mosquito plates, air-conditioning) or
sleep under a mosquito net impregnated with permethrine or
deltamethrine hung over the bed with the edges tucked under the
mattress.
If these measures are carried out correctly, the risk of malaria
will be reduced by 80 to 90% and travel health is maintained
.The intake of pills as prevention
There is no drug efficient enough to prevent malaria 100%, which
means that quite often a combination of measures is preferable.
Also the drugs used have changed over the years. Moreover, the
advantages and disadvantages of drugs should be considered
against the risk of malaria infection. These risks are dependent
on the visited country, and on the region, the season, the
duration of your stay and the kind of trip.
Some people might be troubled by the side effects while taking
antimalarial drugs. These are usually mild and are not always a
reason to stop taking the pills. Sometimes it may be necessary
to change to another type of medication due to intestinal
problems, allergic reactions or other intolerance symptoms.
Therefore it is the doctor who can best decide for each
individual which drug to use. This explains why individuals from
the same group may end up taking different drugs.
Finally, as no drug is 100% effective in preventing malaria, it
is important that if an attack of fever occurs in the first
three months after your return from the tropics, a malaria
infection should be considered as a possibility despite the
correct use of the drug prescribed.
However, it is reassuring to know that malaria, provided it is
recognised in time, is easy to treat without any danger of
recurrent attacks. The belief that "once malaria always malaria"
is totally untrue.
You can find even more travel health tips in the next pages:
DISEASES FOR
WHICH VACCINATIONS ARE AVAILABLE
MORE TRAVEL HEALTH TIPS
CAUTION: The information provided here should not be used during
any medical emergency or for the diagnosis or for the treatment
of any medical condition. A licensed physician should be
consulted for any and all medical conditions. Call 911 for all
medical emergencies.
About the author:
Eddy De Vos is the owner of http://www.spain-ho
lidays-advisor.com/, a website about travel and Spain. It
contains usefull tips for your next trip, be it to Spain or
anywhere else in the world. Of course if you are planning a trip
to Spain there is no better place to start than Spain Holidays
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