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Nurse Organization Issues White Paper for International Traveler Health Safeguards

Ugur Akinci, Ph.D., Nurse-Recruiter.com

808 million people traveled internationally in 2005. Americans made almost 62 million trips abroad in 2004, which translates to about 1 in every 5 U.S. residents.

With the increasing number of people traveling internationally, the risk of diseases carried across national boundaries also increases. The global society brings with itself global health risks as well.

Among the travel-related diseases most frequently mentioned in the press stories are malaria, travelers' diarrhea, hepatitis A, HIV, various STDs, typhoid, and meningitis.

That issue was addressed in a new white paper released by Nurse Practitioner Healthcare Foundation (NPHF), written by Nancy Rudner Lugo, DrPH, NP.

The NPHF paper warned that most travelers do not know anything about such risks and when they do become aware of the danger, it usually proves to be too late.

Only a handful of travelers made sure they received any shots before they flew abroad: 11% for tetanus, 14% for hepatitis A, 13% for hepatitis B, and 5% for yellow fever. 58.4% and 68.7% of travelers reported that they did not receive protection against hepatitis A or hepatitis B, respectively.

This is where NPFH says the nurses have an important role to play both in terms of making the American public aware of the various health dangers lurking out there and also in terms of providing practical and effective means of protection against them.

Consistent with that approach, the Center of Disease Control in Atlanta also recommends that "international travelers contact a healthcare provider for pre-travel advice at least 4 to 6 weeks before travel in order to obtain current health information, vaccinations, and prophylactic medications ( e.g., for malaria, traveler's diarrhea)."

Here are the NPFH recommendations to all the nurses and healthcare professionals:

Visit http://www.nphealthcarefoundation.org/news/ for the full text of the white paper.