ABSTRACT

Travel to exotic places is fascinating, and equally so are infections and other dangers of exotic travel. Moreover, one need not be traveling to suffer these maladies; sometimes they travel to you. The enormous global mobility demands a public health response. The result is the concept of ‘travel medicine’ as a separate discipline. This book describes the evolution of travel medicine, travel vaccines, malaria prophylaxis and infections of adventure and leisure.

This book is unique and different to the standard textbooks on travel medicine. It provides rare insights into many of the behind-the-scenes in travel medicine, personal stories of failures and successes of travel medicine practitioners, the 'real life' tales that unravel the science behind travel medicine. We believe that the best lessons are learned from personal stories.

Not every travel is fun. Some travel is for a cause, be it religious or humanitarian, or be it to escape certain political systems. We have added stories on the tragedies of so-called 'undocumented refugees', and stories written by colleagues who were involved in humanitarian care. Pilgrimages attract large number of 'travelers' and yet we know so little about these pilgrimages. Chapters on the Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, and Christian pilgrimages aim to correct this.

Diseases also travel. The spread of global diseases and pandemics is fascinating. This book provides an overview of the pandemics, in particular that of cholera, yellow fever, severe acute respiratory syndrome and influenza. Globalization, migration and health lead to a history of disease and disparity in the global village - our world. And what about the revised International Health Regulations- what do we need to know about them in the context of travel medicine?

In the next millennium, our world will have inherited further global movement. It may even include travel to aerospace. The 'Epilogue' awakes some of our old dreams - the last frontier, space travel…

Annelies Wilder-Smith has lived in China, Papua New Guinea, Nepal, New Zealand, and Switzerland. She is currently based in Singapore from where she continues to travel extensively throughout Asia. She is the Head of the Travellers Health ' Vaccination Centre in Singapore, one of the largest travel clinics in Asia. She was in a unique position to do research on W135 meningococcal disease in Hajj pilgrims during the outbreak. She 'lived through' the SARS epidemic in Singapore.

Eli Schwartz is the Director of the Center for Geographic Medicine and Tropical Diseases at Sheba Medical Center, Tel-Aviv University, Israel. Eli is a 'real' tropical medicine specialist. He obtained all his experience in the field, including Nepal, Tibet, and numerous adventure travels to Africa where he prefers to do his studies on the sides of the Omo River.

Marc Shaw is a passionate traveler, doctor, actor and observer of fine humor. His favorite pastime is to be an expedition doctor. This has taken him to exotic places such as Namibia, Mongolia, Pitcairn Islands, and to the Amazon. He is the Director of WORLDWIDE Travellers' Health Centres in New Zealand.

part |8 pages

History of Travel Medicine

part |24 pages

Education in Travel Medicine

chapter |10 pages

The Gorgas Course

Learning Travel Medicine While Traveling

part |47 pages

Evolution of Travel Vaccines

chapter |11 pages

Recommended Travel Vaccines

From “Travel Vaccine” to Universal Vaccination — The Hepatitis A Story

chapter |12 pages

Required Travel Vaccinations

Yellow Fever — The Disease and the Vaccine

chapter |8 pages

Remote Travel Vaccines

The Undulating Fortunes of Typhoid Vaccines

chapter |5 pages

Dodging the Bullet

Preventing Rabies among International Travelers

part |27 pages

Personal Tales

chapter |5 pages

Final Log

Amazonas Adventure

chapter |3 pages

The Woman Atop the Crocodile

Newton's Law in Africa

part |80 pages

Tales Behind the Research in Travel Medicine

chapter |7 pages

The Borneo Eco-Challenge

GeoSentinel and Rapid Global Sharing of Disease Outbreak Information

chapter |8 pages

Understanding Malaria Prophylaxis

Lessons Learnt on the Omo River, Ethiopia

chapter |3 pages

Travelers' Diarrhea

Tales from Mexico

chapter |5 pages

Too High Too Fast

Experiences at High Altitude

chapter |6 pages

Mongolian Expedition

chapter |10 pages

Evacuation of Travelers

Personal Anecdotes, Pearls and Conclusions

part |77 pages

Traveling for a Cause

chapter |11 pages

Globalization, Migration and Health

The History of Disease and Disparity in the Global Village*

chapter |18 pages

Between Crossing Boundaries and Respecting Norms

The Story of African Women Labor-Migrants in Israel

part |6 pages

Epilogue

chapter |4 pages

A Look into the Future

Space Travel