Travel Immunization - Medical Condition
Travel Immunization
Travel Immunization Facts
Immunizations are among the most important and effective ways to prevent travel-related infections. Immunizations for travel include:
- the routine childhood or adult immunizations that you would receive in Canada
- those that are required to cross certain international borders (e.g., yellow fever)
- recommended immunizations according to risk of infection
The Canadian government maintains a website with current information for travellers at www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/travel-health.html, and the US government has an excellent travel health site at www.cdc.gov/travel.
For Canadians who travel abroad, there is a small but very real risk of requiring emergency medical treatment in a foreign country. Very few travellers die of serious illness.
The most common illness to strike Canadian tourists in developing countries is travellers’ diarrhea (TD). This is also known as Montezuma’s revenge, turista (in Mexico), or Delhi belly (in India). It is an acute diarrheal illness that usually lasts 3 to 5 days. It can be caused by any of a number of bacteria (and, less often, parasites), which are usually different from home-based varieties and therefore pose a temporary challenge to the immune system. There is no vaccination against all organisms that can cause travellers’ diarrhea. There is an oral vaccine against cholera and a specific strain of E. coli bacteria that is sometimes recommended. TD can often be prevented or self-treated with medications. It is very important to check with a health care professional or travel clinic before travelling in order to obtain advice and medication for self-treatment.
Tourists may be at risk for the following serious infectious diseases, all of which are preventable by vaccine:
- cholera
- European tick-borne encephalitis
- hepatitis A and B
- influenza
- Japanese encephalitis
- meningitis
- rabies
- typhoid
- yellow fever
Diseases like measles, mumps, German measles (rubella), tetanus, polio, pertussis (whooping cough), diphtheria, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), and chickenpox can occur in developing countries as well as in Canada. However, while abroad, Canadians rarely acquire these diseases because we are immunized against them by routine childhood vaccinations (or, in the case of chickenpox, some have had the disease already, which provides immunity against future infection).
The chance of being exposed to infections abroad depends entirely on the style, location, and duration of travel. A 2-week stay in a well-maintained hotel in the city is less likely to result in travel-related infections than a 6-month backpacking trip through the countryside. The one activity that will enormously increase the risk of acquiring a serious disease is unprotected sexual contact with a new partner, which brings a high risk of hepatitis B and HIV (AIDS), as well as other sexually transmitted infections (e.g., chlamydia, gonorrhea, genital herpes).
Globally, the infectious diseases that kill the most people, particularly those living in developing countries, are respiratory diseases (including influenza and pneumonia), AIDS, infections causing diarrhea, tuberculosis, malaria, and measles. Hepatitis infrequently kills during its acute phase, but chronic liver problems caused by this disease are another major cause of death worldwide.
Travel vaccines to consider
Vaccinations are available against hepatitis A and B. Hepatitis A and B are viral infections that attack the liver. The vaccines can be given separately or as one combined vaccine. Depending on the vaccine given, the vaccine may last a lifetime or booster doses may be required.
Canadians should have already been vaccinated against measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), pertussis, and polio as part of their routine immunization schedule. A booster shot may be required for some of these, especially the diphtheria-tetanus (DT) shot (one DT shot covers both diseases), since it provides protection for 10 years. Talk to your doctor or travel clinic to see if you’ll need a booster shot.
Flu viruses and flu vaccines vary in different parts of the world and change every year. The flu vaccine needs to be received every year, in the late autumn, to get full protection. Influenza is transmitted during the cold seasons in both the northern and southern hemispheres, and year-round at the equator.
Typhoid vaccine is likely to be needed by travellers to any country with under-developed water treatment systems and sanitation, particularly when travel is off tourist routes or involves less hygienic accommodations. High-risk areas include South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. Typhoid vaccine protections lasts between 3 to 7 years, depending on which vaccine you get.
Yellow fever vaccine, which lasts about 10 years, is recommended when travelling to large areas of Africa and South America. In addition, according to the World Health Organization, it is one of the only vaccines required by health officials to cross international borders of certain countries. Many countries in Central Africa and South America require yellow fever vaccination certificates for any entry, and other countries demand them from people who have been in yellow fever zones. Yellow fever has a high mortality rate among those who acquire the infection.
Meningococcal (bacterial) meningitis vaccine is recommended for travel to sub-Saharan Africa. This very dangerous disease is contagious (it is passed between people by cough or sneeze). For example, those going to Saudia Arabia for the purpose of Umrah, pilgrimage (Hajj), or seasonal work, require proof of vaccination for entry. Travellers should talk with a travel health professional to determine their individual risk.
Japanese encephalitis, like malaria and yellow fever, is transmitted by a mosquito bite–in this case, by an evening-biting mosquito found mainly in rural areas of South and Southeast Asia. This virus causes symptoms similar to meningitis and is sometimes fatal or leaves victims with severe neurological effects. Japanese encephalitis tends to be more common in affected areas within the summer and fall. Vaccination against it is recommended for anyone planning to spend more than a month in affected areas. Contact a travel health clinic to determine your specific needs. The vaccine is protective for about 1 to 2 years.
European tick-borne encephalitis is caused by a virus carried by ticks and has symptoms that are similar to the Japanese version, but often more severe. It can be found in many European countries, particularly in Central and Eastern regions. Measures to prevent tick bites will also help to reduce the risk of this serious viral disease. These can include wearing clothes that prevent skin exposure, such as closed-toe shoes, long-sleeved shirts and pants, as well as pulling your socks up over your pant legs.
Rabies is a uniformly fatal disease of the brain and central nervous system transmitted mostly by animal bites (particularly dog bites) throughout the world, including North America. There is a safe and very effective rabies vaccine that can be used to prevent rabies. Even with the vaccine, 2 additional doses are required in the event of an animal bite, whether provoked or not. Without the preventative vaccine, in the event of a potential exposure, 5 doses of vaccine and one of rabies immune globulin will be required. Unfortunately, rabies immune globulin is often not available in the developing world, putting the exposed person at serious risk. The vaccine is recommended for long-stay travellers, especially children who often relate to small animals with affection and engage them in activity.
E. coli vaccine, an oral (taken by mouth) immunization that is also effective against cholera, provides protection for three months against the ETEC strain of E. coli, the most frequent cause of travellers’ diarrhea. However, since E. coli is responsible for less than half of the cases of travellers’ diarrhea, carrying an antibiotic regimen for self-treatment of travellers’ diarrhea and observing preventative measures against travellers’ diarrhea is still important.
Malaria prevention requires a combination of antimalarial pills and personal protection measures against insect bites. Unfortunately, we do not yet have a malaria vaccine, but there are several antimalarial medications recommended for the prevention of malaria. Depending on the medication, malaria prophylactic medications should be taken for several weeks or even the day before exposure, during the travel period, and for 1 to 4 weeks after returning home. Since no antimalarial pill is 100% effective, measures must be taken to prevent infection from the night-biting mosquito that transmits malaria. Using DEET-containing insect repellents, permethrin-impregnated bed nets, and air-conditioned or screened accommodation, and wearing trousers and long-sleeved shirts after dark will reduce the risk of this potentially fatal infection.
Travel Immunization Causes
Travel Immunization Symptoms and Complications
Making The Travel Immunization Diagnosis
Travel Immunization Treatment and Prevention
Before you go
Travellers should visit their doctor or a travel clinic at least 2 months before departure. This will give time for the vaccines to take effect. All travel clinics have up-to-date information on which shots are required and recommended for various destinations as well as information on the most up-to-date medications used to prevent malaria. Make sure to tell your health care professional about any pre-existing medical conditions or the possibility of pregnancy at the time of the visit or during travel.
After you return
If you fall ill in the year after returning home from travels, particularly within the first 2 months, it is important that you tell your doctor that you have been abroad. Canadian family doctors are accustomed to looking for diseases common in Canada. They are very unlikely to test you for malaria, for example, unless they know that you have been in a malarial zone.
If you have been in very underdeveloped areas for a long time, you should also consider getting screened for tuberculosis even if you have no symptoms. If this disease is caught early during the latent phase, treatment is likely to be easier.
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