Reasons for seeking care and adherence to pretravel preparation in expatriate or long-term travelers’ children in the tropics: A French prospective study

Studies on pediatric travelers' health rarely address expat or long-term travelers’ children. To investigate reasons for seeking care and adherence to pretravel preparation, we prospectively enrolled French children 0–15 years old, either expatriates or staying >6 months in tropical areas, w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Travel medicine and infectious disease 2022-03, Vol.46, p.102184-102184, Article 102184
Hauptverfasser: Imbert, Patrick, Grondin-Mounier, Cynthia, Faye, Albert, Duron-Martinaud, Sandrine, Mura, Marie, Jambaud, Emmanuel, Cardinale, Fabien, Vidal, Pierre-Olivier, Mahé, Pierre, Lyprendi, Jean, Maresca, Sonia, Mounier, Philippe, Séguy-Mounier, Delphine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Studies on pediatric travelers' health rarely address expat or long-term travelers’ children. To investigate reasons for seeking care and adherence to pretravel preparation, we prospectively enrolled French children 0–15 years old, either expatriates or staying >6 months in tropical areas, who attended a French health center in Africa, Central America or Southern Pacific regions from October 01, 2011 to October 31, 2012. A standardized questionnaire was completed by a general practitioner at each visit, then anonymized and included in our database. 464 questionnaires were collected from 367 children (sex ratio M/F: 1:1). Median age was 6.4 years (IQR: 3.6; 10.3). Reasons for seeking care were mostly infections (n = 378), of which 12 (3.2%) were tropical. There were no deaths, but one child with tuberculosis was repatriated. Coverage was high for routine immunization, but less for travel-related vaccines. Personal antivectorial protection was significantly lower in children aged >5 y or in non-malarial areas. Where indicated, malarial chemoprophylaxis was prescribed to only one third of the children, of whom 60% were poorly compliant. Advice regarding measures against diarrhea was followed significantly more for stays
ISSN:1477-8939
1873-0442
DOI:10.1016/j.tmaid.2021.102184