TRAVEL MEDICINE

Download Report

Transcript TRAVEL MEDICINE

TRAVEL MEDICINE
Medical insurance

Don’t travel without adequate insurance

Make sure it covers repatriation

In Europe have E 111 as well

In 2nd/3rd world countries have IV kit

Take your own medicines
Death’s abroad

69%
CVS
MI etc

21%
Accidents

4%
Infectious diseases
Behaviour

Drink more

Take more risks

Unfamiliar surroundings

Less supervision of children
Immunisation

Risks balanced against incidence of
disease

Risk of japanese encephalitis 1 in 1x10 6th

Risk of anaphylaxis due to vaccine 1 in
40,000

Risk of vaccine greater than risk of
disease
Immunisation

Arrange immunisation 8 weeks before
travel

Up to date advice available from special
web site
Advice

Drink bottled water

Avoid ice in drinks

Peel or wash fruit and veg

Clean teeth with bottled water

Be careful where you eat

Avoid ice cream
Sun

Cover up with tightly woven cotton clothes

Wear hat with large brim

Sit in shade

Stay out of sun either side of noon

Use high spf and uva protection creams

Apply thickly before going out

Reapply after swimming
Dehydration

Drink fluids ++++

Carry water round

Add salt to food
Malaria

3,500 new cases per year

10 deaths
Malaria

50% cases in visiting friends and relatives

19% visitors to UK

16% tourists

11% immigrants

5% expats
Diagnosis

Must think of it

Has the pt malaria

Falciparum or one of the others

From a chloroquine resistant area

Mild Moderate or severe
History

Travel upto a year

Fever with rigors

Flu like illness

Jaundice

Diarrhoea
Malaria

Signs
Fever
 Splenomegally


Investigations
Blood films
 95% thrombocytopaenia
 +_ anaemia
 Wbc normal

Prevention

B
prevent Bites

C
Compliance with medication

A
Awareness of risk

D
Diagnose early
Risk

Place

Activity

Travel

Length of stay

Effectiveness of prophylaxis
Countries
Africa
=
Falciparum
West Africa v high risk of catching low drug
resistance = few deaths
East Africa lower risk of catching high drug
resistance = large no of deaths
India Pakistan Thailand = Vivax
Prevention

Mosquito nets

repair holes

Tuck into mattress

Impregnated with pyrethroid
Prevention

Clothing after dark

Long trousers

Long sleeved shirts/blouses

Tuck trousers into socks
Prevention

Use appropriate insect repellent

Close windows if lights on after dusk

Use knock down spray or coils
Prevention

Chemoprophylaxsis

Use most effective for country

Start 1 week before travelling

Continue for 4 weeks after return

Away from medical help carry quinine
Resistance

East Africa

Mefloquine 90% protection

Proguanil/chloroquine
70% protective
ME vs PC
Similar nos serious advers effects
 Similar nos discontinue
 ME better compliance
 ME 3x no of neuropsychiatric effects

Doxycycline main adverse effect
photosensitisation
 Malarone licensed for 28 days only

Remember

Risk proportional to length of stay

The longer the stay the greater the need to
take prophlaxsis

Adverse effects occur early on
Travellers diarrhoea

Tunisia
70%

Kenya
50%

Egypt
50%

Spain
7%
Infectious agents
Rota virus
 E coli
 Campylobacter
 Salmonella shigella chloera
 Giardia lamblia
 Cryptosporidium
 50% no cause found

Avoidance
Wash fruit and veg
 Drink bottled water
 No ice cubes in drinks
 Clean teeth with bottled water
 No ice cream
 Be wary of where you eat
 Hand washing

Treatment

Fluids only

Rehydration salts

Antibiotics rarely needed
ciprofloxacin
Persisting diarrhoea

Stool culture

Giardia

Metronidazole

tinidazole
Imported infectious diseases

Malaria
2000

Hep A
1000

Typhoid
200

Chloera
a few
Imported fever - causes

Malaria
42%

Non- specific viral
25%

Viral dengue
6%

Viral Hep A
3%
Investigation of fever

Thick and thin blood films

FBC

Dipstick urine

Blood cultures – typhoid

CXR

Serology – toxoplasma hep A
low platelets – malaria dengue