Special infectious disease risks of expatriates and long-term travelers in tropical countries. Part II: Infections other than malaria

A wide range of viral, bacterial, and protozoal diseases pose risk to long-term tropical travelers. Risk varies geographically and with lifestyle. For some infections, risk increases with duration of stay, coming to resemble that of the local population. Risk management strategies include vaccinatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of travel medicine 2007, Vol.14 (1), p.50-60
Hauptverfasser: TOOVEY, Stephen, MOERMAN, Filip, VAN GOMPEL, Alfons
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container_title Journal of travel medicine
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creator TOOVEY, Stephen
MOERMAN, Filip
VAN GOMPEL, Alfons
description A wide range of viral, bacterial, and protozoal diseases pose risk to long-term tropical travelers. Risk varies geographically and with lifestyle. For some infections, risk increases with duration of stay, coming to resemble that of the local population. Risk management strategies include vaccination, chemoprophylaxis, avoidance measures, and screening, where appropriate. Vaccination against hepatitis A and B, typhoid, and rabies is recommended for all long-term travelers to (sub-)tropical areas. Lowering of the vaccination threshold for Japanese encephalitis is suggested. Meningococcal disease is rare in travelers, but vaccination is safe and acceptable. The efficacy of Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) is uncertain; immunological testing avoids BCG's confounding of tuberculin testing. Diarrhea is common, and self-treatment may be recommended. Sexually transmitted infections including human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are serious risks; education, screening, and HIV postexposure prophylaxis following involuntary exposure are recommended. Many infections are chronic or asymptomatic, and appropriate screening is recommended on return or after prolonged exposure.
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source MEDLINE; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Oxford Journals
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Communicable Diseases - epidemiology
Communicable Diseases - etiology
General aspects
Human protozoal diseases
Humans
Infectious diseases
Malaria
Medical sciences
Parasitic diseases
Protozoal diseases
Refugees - statistics & numerical data
Travel
Tropical Climate
Vaccination
title Special infectious disease risks of expatriates and long-term travelers in tropical countries. Part II: Infections other than malaria
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