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Post-Travel Health Consultation

Post-Travel Health Consultation. Dr Peter A. Leggat MD, PhD, DrPH, FAFPHM, FACTM, FFTM Associate Professor School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine James Cook University & Visiting Professor School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand. About the author.

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Post-Travel Health Consultation

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  1. Post-Travel Health Consultation Dr Peter A. Leggat MD, PhD, DrPH, FAFPHM, FACTM, FFTM Associate Professor School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine James Cook University & Visiting Professor School of Public Health University of the Witwatersrand

  2. About the author • Dr Peter Leggat has co-ordinated the Australian postgraduate course in travel medicine since 1993. He has also been on the faculty of the South African travel medicine course, conducted since 2000, and the Worldwise New Zealand Travel Health update programs since 1998. Dr Leggat has assisted in the development of travel medicine programs in several countries and also the Certificate of Knowledge examination for the International Society of Travel Medicine.

  3. Objectives of the session • Review statistics • Briefly review the sorts of problems travelers have abroad • Examine why it may be important to see travelers if they are unwell on return and what policies may be applicable in practice • Document some important aspects of the post-travel history and examination

  4. Some References • Steffen et al. Manual of Travel Medicine and Health. Decker, 2003 Sec 4. • Leggat et al. Primer of Travel Medicine. ACTM Publications, 2002 Ch. 19.

  5. The Continuum of Travel Medicine Preventive Medicine Pre-Travel Visitors ContingencyPlanning During Travel Treatment & Rehabilitation Post-Travel

  6. The Good News • Most travelers report no major problems whilst travelling and most are asymptomatic on return

  7. Travelers are exposed to a variety of hazards

  8. Swiss Travelers • 15-50% of travelers to developing countries report some illness or injury • 8% in the study of 10,000 Swiss travelers consulted a medical officer • 1% required hospitalization and 3% had time off work

  9. Insured Australian travelers* • Approx 20,000 policies issued each year (incl. Exec. Gold) • About 1600 claims (8%) • 400 claims for emergency assistance (2%) • 80 ER or clinic referrals (0.4%) • 46 Hospital admissions (0.2%) • 10 Aeromedical evacuations (0.05%) *Leggat et al (2005) Emergency assistance provided abroad to insured travellers from Australia. Travel Med Inf Dis 3: 9-17

  10. Common things occur commonly • Gastrointestinal-diarrhoeal diseases effecting 20-40% or more of short term travelers • Respiratory tract infection • Cutaneous infections • Trauma and injuries (accidents- commonest cause of preventable death) • Sexually transmitted infections • Dental problems • Others (remember malaria)

  11. Post-Travel Consultation • Many travel related problems are self-limiting • Why might it be important to see travelers who have an illness post-travel?

  12. The traveler may have a life threatening infections • Malaria due to P. Falciparum • Viral hepatitis • Typhoid • Amoebiasis/Amoebic liver abscess • Legionnaire’s disease • Melioidosis • Rabies • Others

  13. Travelers may have infections that pose a risk to public health • Dengue (2-5 days) • Lassa, Ebola and others (3-21 days) • Japanese Encephalitis (3-7 days) • Yellow fever (3-6 days) • Typhoid (1-2 days) • Malaria (Pv-10 days to year-relapses; Pf 10-28 days) • SARS (2-10 days) • Others

  14. It is important to develop policies in travel medicine • Policy and procedures, including • Policy of follow-up of travelers • Policy on notifiable diseases • Policy on reporting adverse reactions • Policy on “eradication” treatment

  15. Policy on follow-up of travelers Do you see travellers • Symptomatic on return? • Symptomatic whilst aboard? • Asymptomatic abroad and asymptomatic now? • To complete immunization courses?

  16. It is important that the clinic have a written policy • It is essential that travellers who become ill on return seek medical attention as soon as possible • The traveller should be advised to inform the clinic that they have been or are currently traveling • It is also important to ask if patients: “Have you been traveling recently?”

  17. Policy on reporting notifiable diseases and adverse reaction • Is it a notifiable disease? Early liaison concerning suspected cases and formal notification to public health units • Keep a list of notifiable diseases and reporting forms • Document and report any possible serious adverse reactions to immunisations and chemoprophylaxic and other medications experienced by traveller whilst abroad • Is the traveler part of a clinical trial?

  18. Travel medicine has assumed a major role in monitoring global trends in infectious disease, especially emerging infectious diseases

  19. Travel medicine networks • GeoSentinel (ISTM/CDC) • May provide early warning of outbreak amongst travelers returning to disparate locations • TropNet Europ • WHO • Local networks • Other networks

  20. Eradication Policy • Do you prescribe empiric “eradication” treatment? • If so, what groups of travelers?

  21. Eradication “Treatment” • Malaria - primaquine (check G6PD deficiency), (tafenoquine) • Deworming agent for soil transmitted “roundworms” (consider strongyloides) • Deworming agent for “flatworms”- praziquantel • Deworming agent for filariasis - albendazole • Antiprotozoal agent - giardiasis • Others (?)

  22. Groups where eradication treatment may be considered • Medium to long term travelers or overseas workers • Those travellers at high risk of infection • Those where diagnosis suggestive but investigations inconclusive • Where required by authorities-refugees • Even when on preventive measures!

  23. Occasionally preventive measures do fail • Immunizations and chemoprophylactic agents and personal protective measures are not 100% protective • Variable compliance with preventive advice • Incorrect/insufficient advice/health intelligence

  24. Post-travel Consultation • History • Examination • Investigations

  25. Screening History • Are they symptomatic now or have been? • Risk assessment - leading to specific history of possible exposures, e.g. schistosomiasis, zoonotic disease, sexual history, recently been diving, have they been bitten? • Is there correspondence in relation to treatment abroad? • Travel history can be important in terms of working out possible incubation period and differential diagnosis

  26. Screening History • Prophylaxis and compliance - was the prophylaxis appropriate? • Could it be a pre-existing condition? • Could it be related to an occupational/recreational exposure?

  27. Screening Examination • Post-travel physical examination for most short term travelers is usually unremarkable for disease, but may be useful for assessment of injuries • Signs of “tropical” disease can be subtle and can be missed unless specifically looked for, e.g. rashes, eschar, jaundice • Abnormalities unrelated to travel

  28. Look for the “spot” diagnosis • Hookworms and cutaneous larva migrans: tracking lesions on the foot (or other body areas in contact with sand/soil)

  29. Look for the “spot”diagnosis • Leishmaniasis: non-healing skin ulcers/lesions, especially on exposed areas and been to endemic areas • Eschars-may be associated with rickettsial infectious such as scrub typhus • Skin infection: bacterial and fungal (ask for occupational and recreational history) • Others

  30. Screening Examination • When sending specimens to lab, document current medications, history, what you think • Liaise with lab if unsure what tests available • Stool microscopy M/C/S, O/C/P-most diarrhoeal disease bacterial>>parasitic>viral • Urine tests-dipstick urinalysis, “terminal” urine for ova of S. haematobium • Full Blood Count and differential- eosinophilia, anaemia, thrombocytopenia

  31. Screening Examination • Rapid tests, e.g. Immunochromographic tests (ICT)-often used for initial screening for malaria, Bancroftian filariasis, (dengue), etc • Serological investigations, e.g. schistosomiasis, filariasis • Blood films for malaria • HIV/STI serology • TB screening-useful if you can compare with pre-travel

  32. Does the traveler have diarrhea? • Most travelers’ diarrhea is brief, self-limiting and non-inflammatory (about 4 days in duration) • About 20% of travelers have fever and/or bloody diarrhea • Enterotoxigenic Escherichia Coli is probably the most frequent pathogen in about 40-75 of cases

  33. Travelers’ diarrhea • Inflammatory diarrhea may be caused by Campylobacter, Shigella or Salmonella infection • Fever, cramping abdominal pain, pus and/or blood in the stool • Quinolone antibiotics often employed (some resistance) • Remember amoebic dysentery and giardiasis

  34. Travelers’ diarrhea • Persistent diarrhea may be giardiasis, which may need treatment with tinidazole or metronidazole • Chronic diarrhea may need further investigation and referral

  35. Does the traveler have fever? • Possible serious infectious disease causes in travelers returning from tropical regions: • Malaria-great mimicker • Hepatitis A • Enteric fever (incl typhoid) • Dengue fever • Others

  36. Has the traveler been injured abroad? • Need to document extent of injuries • Are they covered by any insurance or superannuation policy? • Arrange for any further treatment and follow-up • Liaise with airlines if further travel required • Arrange for assessment for rehabilitation as necessary

  37. Post-Travel Consultation • It is important to elicit a history of travel. • Many short term travelers will present with illness when they get back, following the incubation period. • Investigation and management of some post-travel illnesses will be urgent because they are life threatening and/or a threat to public health.

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