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| We offer a travel health pack for single travelers,
couples and families to help minimise the risk of illness
when traveling. |
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ANTILLES
- Confirm primary courses and boosters are up to date as recommended
in the vaccination schedule - including vaccines given to special groups
because of risk exposure or complications (e.g. hepatitis B for health
care workers, influenza and pneumococcal vaccines for the elderly).
- Courses or boosters usually advised: tetanus; hepatitis
A.
- Courses or boosters sometimes advised: diphtheria;
typhoid; hepatitis B.
- Rabies is not normally present but animal and bat
bites should always be assessed carefully.
- Yellow fever certificate required if entering from
an area with risk of yellow fever transmission and over 6 months old.
Notes on the diseases mentioned above
- Tetanus is contracted through dirty cuts and scratches.
This is a serious infection of the nervous system.
- Typhoid and hepatitis A are spread
through contaminated food and water. Typhoid causes septicaemia and
hepatitis A causes liver inflammation and jaundice. In risk areas you
should be immunised if good hygiene is impossible.
- Diphtheria is also spread by droplet infection through
close personal contact. Vaccination is advised if close contact with
locals in risk areas is likely.
- Hepatitis B is spread through infected blood, contaminated
needles and sexual intercourse, It affects the liver, causes jaundice
and occasionally liver failure. Vaccination is recommended for those at occupational risk (e.g. health care workers), for long stays or frequent travel to medium and high risk areas, for those more likely to be exposed such as children (from cuts and scratches) and those who may need surgical procedures.
- Rabies is spread through bites or licks on broken
skin from an infected animal. It is always fatal. Vaccination is advised
for those going to risk areas that will be remote from a reliable source
of vaccine. Even when pre-exposure vaccines have been received urgent
medical advice should be sought after any animal bite.
- Malaria - See Map not normally present unless the illness was contracted abroad.
Discovery Travel
Network has used information supplied from www.fitfortravel.nhs.uk
please visit this site for up to date information.
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