Travel medicine: tales behind the science
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford [u.a.]
Elsevier
2007
|
Ausgabe: | 1. ed. |
Schriftenreihe: | Advances in tourism research
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XX, 333 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9780080453590 |
Internformat
MARC
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264 | 1 | |a Oxford [u.a.] |b Elsevier |c 2007 | |
300 | |a XX, 333 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |c 24 cm | ||
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648 | 7 | |a Geschichte |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf | |
650 | 4 | |a Travel / Health aspects | |
650 | 4 | |a Communicable Disease Control | |
650 | 4 | |a Immunization | |
650 | 4 | |a Travel | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
List of Figures and Maps ix
List of Tables xiii
List of Contributors xv
Introduction 1
Annelies Wilder Smith, Eli Schwartz and Marc Shaw
Section 1: History of Travel Medicine
1. History of the Development of Travel Medicine as a
New Discipline 7
Gabriela Buck and Robert Steffen
Section 2: Education in Travel Medicine
2. Education in Travel Medicine 15
Phyllis Kozarsky
3. The Gorgas Course: Learning Travel Medicine While Traveling 21
David O. Freedman
4. The Ten Commandments for Healthy Tropical Travel 31
Jay S. Keystone
Section 3: Evolution of Travel Vaccines
5. Routine Vaccinations and Travel 39
Peter A. Leggat
vi Contents
6. Recommended Travel Vaccines: From Travel Vaccine to
Universal Vaccination — The Hepatitis A Story 47
Francis E. Andre
7. Required Travel Vaccinations: Yellow Fever —
The Disease and the Vaccine 59
Chen Collins
8. Remote Travel Vaccines: The Undulating Fortunes of
Typhoid Vaccines 71
Eyal Meltzer and Eli Schwartz
9. Dodging the Bullet: Preventing Rabies among
International Travelers 79
Paul M. Arguin and Nicole F. Oechslin
Section 4: Malaria Drugs and Infections of Adventure
10. Barking up the Right Trees? Malaria Drugs from
Cinchona to Qing Hao 87
Patricia Schlagenhauf Lawlor
11. Infections of Adventure and Leisure 91
Annelies Wilder Smith
Section 5: Personal Tales: Travel Medicine Practitioners Share Their Stories
12. Final Log: Amazonas Adventure 101
Marc Shaw
13. Tales from the Mountains 107
Ted Lankester
14. Confessions of a Reality TV Doc 113
Marc Shaw
15. Tomb Raider s Crew Doctor 117
Laragh Gollogly
16. The Woman Atop the Crocodile: Newton s Law in Africa 123
Stephen Toovey
Section 6: Tales Behind the Research in Travel Medicine
17. The Borneo Eco Challenge: GeoSentinel and Rapid Global
Sharing of Disease Outbreak Information 129
David O. Freedman
Contents vii
18. Understanding Malaria Prophylaxis: Lessons Learnt on the
Omo River, Ethiopia 137
Eli Schwartz
19. Travelers Diarrhea: Tales from Mexico 145
Charles D. Ericsson
20. The History of the CIWEC Clinic in Kathmandu, Nepal 149
Prativa Pandey and David R. Shlim
21. History of Cyclospora at the CIWEC Clinic, Nepal 161
David R. Shlim
22. Meningococcal Disease and the Hajj Pilgrimage 171
Annelies Wilder Smith
23. Too High Too Fast: Experiences at High Altitude 177
Ken Zafren
24. The Pleasures and Perils of Traveling with Young Children 183
Karl Neumann
25. Mongolian Expedition 191
Marc Shaw
26. Evacuation of Travelers: Personal Anecdotes,
Pearls and Conclusions 197
Yoel Donchin and Steven Marc Friedman
Section 7: Traveling for a Cause
27. Globalization, Migration and Health: The History of
Disease and Disparity in the Global Village 209
Brian Gushulak
28. Stories of Undocumented Migrants to the USA 221
Nancy Piper Jenks
29. Between Crossing Boundaries and Respecting Norms:
The Story of African Women Labor Migrants in Israel 229
Galia Sabar
30. Humanitarian Care in Haiti and Rwanda 247
Anne E. McCarthy
31. Muslim Pilgrimage 253
ZiadA. Memish
viii Contents
32. The Pilgrimages of Christianity 263
Michel J. Deprez
33. Hindu Pilgrimages 269
Santanu Chatterjee
34. Pilgrimages in the High Himalayas 279
Ken Zafren
Section 8: When Diseases Travel
35. Cholera: A Travel History of the First Modern Pandemic 287
Eyal Meltzer and Eli Schwartz
36. The Role of Armies in Spreading Epidemics:
Vector and Victim 299
Eran Dolev
37. The Spread of Disease in the 20th Century and
Lessons for the 21st Century 305
Stephen M. Ostroff
38. As Travel Medicine Practitioner during the SARS
Outbreak in Singapore 313
Annelies Wilder Smith
39. What Does the Travel Medicine Practitioner Need to Know
About the International Health Regulations? 321
Max Hardiman
Section 9: Epilogue
40. A Look into the Future: Space Travel 327
Larry DeLucas
Subject Index 331
List of Figures and Maps
Image 3.1. Typical inter Andean valley. David O. Freedman and Ciro
Maguina in an arid Andean valley at about 1,000 m above
sea level. This is a typical endemic area for leishmaniasis and
bartonellosis. In Peru, malaria transmission occurs primarily in the
jungle regions so that there is no overlap between the two diseases.
Ciro Maguina is a leading authority on Bartonella bacilliformis
and his reviews in the medical literature should be consulted for
those interested in the disease. 25
Image 3.2. Coca Tea and Altitude illness prevention. Ciro Maguina with a
coca leaf and the author showing the traditional Peruvian
prophylaxis for mountain sickness. On the Gorgas Course
field trip, a Coca tea stop is always made at San Mateo at about
3,000 m just before reaching medically significant altitudes.
The active and notorious ingredient in coca leaves is not water
soluble, so it is not present in the tea. The taste is pleasant, and
even if no scientific study has shown any benefit of the tea,
the stop needed to rest and drink the tea before ascending is
likely a main benefit. 26
Image 3.3. Oxygen Saturation Measurement. Yae Jean Kim (South Korea)
after measuring her oxygen saturation at San Mateo during the
second of three readings done by each course participant, and
recording her Lake Louise score. Paul Southern looks on. 26
Image 3.4. Ticlio — Highest Point on the Road and Railway. From Left,
Ted Kuhn (Medical College of Georgia, USA), Joseph Kolars
(Mayo Clinic, USA), Susan Mcllelan (Tulane University, USA),
and Annelies Wilder Smith (Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore)
after the rapid ascent over a few hours from sea level to the sign
showing what was in 2001, the highest railway tracks in the
world at 4,818 m (15,600 feet). 27
Image 3.5. Rapid De Saturation with Exercise at Altitude. Anne McCarthy
(Ottawa) at Ticlio after 1 min of vigorous exercise. The oxygen
saturation of 49% was the lowest we have recorded and fortunately
climbed quickly with the ensuing reflex hyperventilation. 27
x List of Figures and Maps
Image 3.6. Gorgas Expert Group 2005 After Pachamanca (Incan feast)
Lunch. After descent to a comfortable altitude, the Gorgas
groups can sit down and share experiences of tropical and travel
medicine with colleagues from all over the world in an
inter Andean valley. Pictured from left to right are: Peter Leutscher
(Denmark), Jetmund Ringstad (Norway), Paul Southern (USA),
Judy Stone (USA), Micheal Parry (USA), Yae Jean Kim
(South Korea), Ashley Watson (Australia), Leigh Grossman (USA),
Poh Lian Lim (Singapore), Theresa Schlager (USA), Soren Thybo
(Denmark), Debbie Heit (USA), Leif Dotevall (Sweden),
Cathy Suh (Canada), David Freedman (USA, Faculty), Michael
Barnish (USA), Anne McCarthy (Canada), David Roesel (USA),
Issa Ephtimios (Canada), Kathy Hernandez (Peru, Faculty), Ciro
Maguina (Peru, Faculty). 28
Image 3.7. Dr Alan Magill (Walter Reed Army Institute of Research)
Leading a Field Trip to a Malarious Amazonian Village.
Pictured are some members of the Diploma Class of 1999 from
left to right: Judy Streit (USA), Jeff Chapman (USA),
Mario Onagan (Philippines), Ali Al Barak (Saudi Arabia),
Alan Magill, Monica Guardo (Colombia). 28
Image 3.8. First Amazon Travel Medicine Course, 1997. Robert Steffen
(Zurich), the father of travel medicine, conducting a malaria
workshop exactly in context in the Amazon rainforest. 29
Image 3.9. Time off During the Amazon Travel Medicine Course.
Elaine Jong (University of Washington) trying her hand with a
traditional hunting implement loaded with blanks and not live
curare tipped ammunition. 29
Image 3.10. Familiarization Cruise on La Turmalina, 1997. During the
first Amazon Travel Medicine course, the owner of a fleet of
luxury cruise boats in the burgeoning Amazon cruise business
recognized the potential influence of this group and invited us on
board for the day. Pictured from left to right are: Nancy Bennett,
Karl Neumann, Robert Steffen, Assunta Marcolongo, Vernon
Ansdell, Ed Cupp, Dominique Tessier, Elaine Jong, Charlotte
deFrances, Tom Nutman, David Freedman, Unknown, Linda
Casebeer. Robert Steffen and his wife Eve would later return to
enter the 21st century on the special Millenium Cruise aboard
La Turmalina. 30
Image 7.1. Dr. Benjamin Rush. 63
Image 7.2. Dr. Reed s bold experiments proved that YF was indeed spread
by the bite of the mosquito Aedes aegypti. 64
Image 7.3. Colonel William Crawford Gorgas. 65
List of Figures and Maps xi
Image 7.4. Screening and isolation of malaria and YF patient in the Panama
Canal region. 66
Map 8.1. Typhoid world distribution. 75
Image 12.1. On hearing of the murder of Blake: quiet, painful contemplation. 103
Image 12.2. The monkey and the medicine man. 105
Map 18.1. Map of Ethiopia and the Omo river. 137
Image 18.1. Rafting on the Omo river. 140
Image 18.2. A surprise meeting with hippos on the Omo. 141
Image 18.3. Camping on the bank of the Omo. 141
Image 18.4. Local rafters. 142
Figure 21.1. The number of cases of Cyclospora per week during the years
1989 1991, showing the distinct seasonality. The organism
was not seen during those years from December through April.
In 1989, we only started recording the organism on June 19th. 164
Image 23.1. Ken Zafren, MD and his guru, Mi Tsering, at the Mani Rimdu
festival, Thyangboche Monastery, Nepal in 1992. 181
Image 25.1. The memsahib What am I doing here? 196
Image 26.1. Dr. Friedman, transporting a patient via Lear Jet. 205
Image 26.2. Copilot has nutrition break during brief stop to refuel. 205
Image 26.3. Belfast shipyards, after dusk. We await a ground ambulance to
complete transfer of our patient to hospital. 206
Image 28.1. Laura migrated to the States without her children. 226
Image 28.2. Manuel tries on his new leg. 226
Image 28.3. Migrant day laborers wait for work near community outreach van. 227
Image 29.1. African migrant laborer with child, on the streets of Tel Aviv. 246
Image 29.2. Migrant laborer at her temporary home with her child. 246
Image 30.1. Children admitted to central hospital of Kigali, the older child
on the left is actually a caregiver for the little girl on the bed
who underwent months of antibiotic therapy and repeated
operations for severe tibial osteomyelitis. 251
Figure 31.1. The number of overseas pilgrims according to modes of arrival
to Hajj between 1414 and 1425H (1994 2005). 254
Figure 31.2. Extraordinary congestion during the Hajj. 255
Figure 31.3. State of the art automated abattoir facilities at the Hajj. 258
Figure 31.4. Illegal unlicensed barbers operating at the Hajj. 259
Figure 35.1. Map of the first two cholera pandemics. 296
xii List of Figures and Maps
Image 35.1. Busy pediatric ward during a cholera epidemic in Equatorial
Guinea. 297
Image 35.2. Local hospital s intensive care unit; Child being treated for
severe cholera. 297
Image 35.3. Rice Water excretion of a child with cholera. 298
List of Tables
Table 5.1: Approximate timeline of early development of human vaccines. 40
Table 5.2: Routine vaccinations to be reviewed in the pre travel health
consultation (after WHO, 2005). 41
Table 5.3: Recommendations for Hepatitis B vaccination based on
potential risks for travelers (after WHO, 2005). 43
Table 35.1: Timeline in cholera history. 289
Table 35.2: List of cholera outbreaks in the 21st century. 294
|
adam_txt |
Contents
List of Figures and Maps ix
List of Tables xiii
List of Contributors xv
Introduction 1
Annelies Wilder Smith, Eli Schwartz and Marc Shaw
Section 1: History of Travel Medicine
1. History of the Development of Travel Medicine as a
New Discipline 7
Gabriela Buck and Robert Steffen
Section 2: Education in Travel Medicine
2. Education in Travel Medicine 15
Phyllis Kozarsky
3. The Gorgas Course: Learning Travel Medicine While Traveling 21
David O. Freedman
4. The Ten Commandments for Healthy Tropical Travel 31
Jay S. Keystone
Section 3: Evolution of Travel Vaccines
5. Routine Vaccinations and Travel 39
Peter A. Leggat
vi Contents
6. Recommended Travel Vaccines: From "Travel Vaccine" to
Universal Vaccination — The Hepatitis A Story 47
Francis E. Andre
7. Required Travel Vaccinations: Yellow Fever —
The Disease and the Vaccine 59
Chen Collins
8. Remote Travel Vaccines: The Undulating Fortunes of
Typhoid Vaccines 71
Eyal Meltzer and Eli Schwartz
9. Dodging the Bullet: Preventing Rabies among
International Travelers 79
Paul M. Arguin and Nicole F. Oechslin
Section 4: Malaria Drugs and Infections of Adventure
10. Barking up the Right Trees? Malaria Drugs from
Cinchona to Qing Hao 87
Patricia Schlagenhauf Lawlor
11. Infections of Adventure and Leisure 91
Annelies Wilder Smith
Section 5: Personal Tales: Travel Medicine Practitioners Share Their Stories
12. Final Log: Amazonas Adventure 101
Marc Shaw
13. Tales from the Mountains 107
Ted Lankester
14. Confessions of a 'Reality TV Doc 113
Marc Shaw
15. Tomb Raider's Crew Doctor 117
Laragh Gollogly
16. The Woman Atop the Crocodile: Newton's Law in Africa 123
Stephen Toovey
Section 6: Tales Behind the Research in Travel Medicine
17. The Borneo Eco Challenge: GeoSentinel and Rapid Global
Sharing of Disease Outbreak Information 129
David O. Freedman
Contents vii
18. Understanding Malaria Prophylaxis: Lessons Learnt on the
Omo River, Ethiopia 137
Eli Schwartz
19. Travelers'Diarrhea: Tales from Mexico 145
Charles D. Ericsson
20. The History of the CIWEC Clinic in Kathmandu, Nepal 149
Prativa Pandey and David R. Shlim
21. History of Cyclospora at the CIWEC Clinic, Nepal 161
David R. Shlim
22. Meningococcal Disease and the Hajj Pilgrimage 171
Annelies Wilder Smith
23. Too High Too Fast: Experiences at High Altitude 177
Ken Zafren
24. The Pleasures and Perils of Traveling with Young Children 183
Karl Neumann
25. Mongolian Expedition 191
Marc Shaw
26. Evacuation of Travelers: Personal Anecdotes,
Pearls and Conclusions 197
Yoel Donchin and Steven Marc Friedman
Section 7: Traveling for a Cause
27. Globalization, Migration and Health: The History of
Disease and Disparity in the Global Village 209
Brian Gushulak
28. Stories of Undocumented Migrants to the USA 221
Nancy Piper Jenks
29. Between Crossing Boundaries and Respecting Norms:
The Story of African Women Labor Migrants in Israel 229
Galia Sabar
30. Humanitarian Care in Haiti and Rwanda 247
Anne E. McCarthy
31. Muslim Pilgrimage 253
ZiadA. Memish
viii Contents
32. The Pilgrimages of Christianity 263
Michel J. Deprez
33. Hindu Pilgrimages 269
Santanu Chatterjee
34. Pilgrimages in the High Himalayas 279
Ken Zafren
Section 8: When Diseases Travel
35. Cholera: A Travel History of the First Modern Pandemic 287
Eyal Meltzer and Eli Schwartz
36. The Role of Armies in Spreading Epidemics:
Vector and Victim 299
Eran Dolev
37. The Spread of Disease in the 20th Century and
Lessons for the 21st Century 305
Stephen M. Ostroff
38. As Travel Medicine Practitioner during the SARS
Outbreak in Singapore 313
Annelies Wilder Smith
39. What Does the Travel Medicine Practitioner Need to Know
About the International Health Regulations? 321
Max Hardiman
Section 9: Epilogue
40. A Look into the Future: Space Travel 327
Larry DeLucas
Subject Index 331
List of Figures and Maps
Image 3.1. Typical inter Andean valley. David O. Freedman and Ciro
Maguina in an arid Andean valley at about 1,000 m above
sea level. This is a typical endemic area for leishmaniasis and
bartonellosis. In Peru, malaria transmission occurs primarily in the
jungle regions so that there is no overlap between the two diseases.
Ciro Maguina is a leading authority on Bartonella bacilliformis
and his reviews in the medical literature should be consulted for
those interested in the disease. 25
Image 3.2. Coca Tea and Altitude illness prevention. Ciro Maguina with a
coca leaf and the author showing the traditional Peruvian
prophylaxis for mountain sickness. On the Gorgas Course
field trip, a Coca tea stop is always made at San Mateo at about
3,000 m just before reaching medically significant altitudes.
The active and notorious ingredient in coca leaves is not water
soluble, so it is not present in the tea. The taste is pleasant, and
even if no scientific study has shown any benefit of the tea,
the stop needed to rest and drink the tea before ascending is
likely a main benefit. 26
Image 3.3. Oxygen Saturation Measurement. Yae Jean Kim (South Korea)
after measuring her oxygen saturation at San Mateo during the
second of three readings done by each course participant, and
recording her Lake Louise score. Paul Southern looks on. 26
Image 3.4. Ticlio — Highest Point on the Road and Railway. From Left,
Ted Kuhn (Medical College of Georgia, USA), Joseph Kolars
(Mayo Clinic, USA), Susan Mcllelan (Tulane University, USA),
and Annelies Wilder Smith (Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore)
after the rapid ascent over a few hours from sea level to the sign
showing what was in 2001, the highest railway tracks in the
world at 4,818 m (15,600 feet). 27
Image 3.5. Rapid De Saturation with Exercise at Altitude. Anne McCarthy
(Ottawa) at Ticlio after 1 min of vigorous exercise. The oxygen
saturation of 49% was the lowest we have recorded and fortunately
climbed quickly with the ensuing reflex hyperventilation. 27
x List of Figures and Maps
Image 3.6. Gorgas Expert Group 2005 After Pachamanca (Incan feast)
Lunch. After descent to a comfortable altitude, the Gorgas
groups can sit down and share experiences of tropical and travel
medicine with colleagues from all over the world in an
inter Andean valley. Pictured from left to right are: Peter Leutscher
(Denmark), Jetmund Ringstad (Norway), Paul Southern (USA),
Judy Stone (USA), Micheal Parry (USA), Yae Jean Kim
(South Korea), Ashley Watson (Australia), Leigh Grossman (USA),
Poh Lian Lim (Singapore), Theresa Schlager (USA), Soren Thybo
(Denmark), Debbie Heit (USA), Leif Dotevall (Sweden),
Cathy Suh (Canada), David Freedman (USA, Faculty), Michael
Barnish (USA), Anne McCarthy (Canada), David Roesel (USA),
Issa Ephtimios (Canada), Kathy Hernandez (Peru, Faculty), Ciro
Maguina (Peru, Faculty). 28
Image 3.7. Dr Alan Magill (Walter Reed Army Institute of Research)
Leading a Field Trip to a Malarious Amazonian Village.
Pictured are some members of the Diploma Class of 1999 from
left to right: Judy Streit (USA), Jeff Chapman (USA),
Mario Onagan (Philippines), Ali Al Barak (Saudi Arabia),
Alan Magill, Monica Guardo (Colombia). 28
Image 3.8. First Amazon Travel Medicine Course, 1997. Robert Steffen
(Zurich), the father of travel medicine, conducting a malaria
workshop exactly in context in the Amazon rainforest. 29
Image 3.9. Time off During the Amazon Travel Medicine Course.
Elaine Jong (University of Washington) trying her hand with a
traditional hunting implement loaded with blanks and not "live"
curare tipped ammunition. 29
Image 3.10. Familiarization Cruise on La Turmalina, 1997. During the
first Amazon Travel Medicine course, the owner of a fleet of
luxury cruise boats in the burgeoning Amazon cruise business
recognized the potential influence of this group and invited us on
board for the day. Pictured from left to right are: Nancy Bennett,
Karl Neumann, Robert Steffen, Assunta Marcolongo, Vernon
Ansdell, Ed Cupp, Dominique Tessier, Elaine Jong, Charlotte
deFrances, Tom Nutman, David Freedman, Unknown, Linda
Casebeer. Robert Steffen and his wife Eve would later return to
enter the 21st century on the special Millenium Cruise aboard
La Turmalina. 30
Image 7.1. Dr. Benjamin Rush. 63
Image 7.2. Dr. Reed's bold experiments proved that YF was indeed spread
by the bite of the mosquito Aedes aegypti. 64
Image 7.3. Colonel William Crawford Gorgas. 65
List of Figures and Maps xi
Image 7.4. Screening and isolation of malaria and YF patient in the Panama
Canal region. 66
Map 8.1. Typhoid world distribution. 75
Image 12.1. On hearing of the murder of Blake: quiet, painful contemplation. 103
Image 12.2. The monkey and the medicine man. 105
Map 18.1. Map of Ethiopia and the Omo river. 137
Image 18.1. Rafting on the Omo river. 140
Image 18.2. A surprise meeting with hippos on the Omo. 141
Image 18.3. Camping on the bank of the Omo. 141
Image 18.4. Local rafters. 142
Figure 21.1. The number of cases of Cyclospora per week during the years
1989 1991, showing the distinct seasonality. The organism
was not seen during those years from December through April.
In 1989, we only started recording the organism on June 19th. 164
Image 23.1. Ken Zafren, MD and his guru, Mi Tsering, at the Mani Rimdu
festival, Thyangboche Monastery, Nepal in 1992. 181
Image 25.1. The memsahib "What am I doing here?" 196
Image 26.1. Dr. Friedman, transporting a patient via Lear Jet. 205
Image 26.2. Copilot has nutrition break during brief stop to refuel. 205
Image 26.3. Belfast shipyards, after dusk. We await a ground ambulance to
complete transfer of our patient to hospital. 206
Image 28.1. Laura migrated to the States without her children. 226
Image 28.2. Manuel tries on his new leg. 226
Image 28.3. Migrant day laborers wait for work near community outreach van. 227
Image 29.1. African migrant laborer with child, on the streets of Tel Aviv. 246
Image 29.2. Migrant laborer at her temporary home with her child. 246
Image 30.1. Children admitted to central hospital of Kigali, the older child
on the left is actually a caregiver for the little girl on the bed
who underwent months of antibiotic therapy and repeated
operations for severe tibial osteomyelitis. 251
Figure 31.1. The number of overseas pilgrims according to modes of arrival
to Hajj between 1414 and 1425H (1994 2005). 254
Figure 31.2. Extraordinary congestion during the Hajj. 255
Figure 31.3. State of the art automated abattoir facilities at the Hajj. 258
Figure 31.4. Illegal unlicensed barbers operating at the Hajj. 259
Figure 35.1. Map of the first two cholera pandemics. 296
xii List of Figures and Maps
Image 35.1. Busy pediatric ward during a cholera epidemic in Equatorial
Guinea. 297
Image 35.2. Local hospital's intensive care unit; Child being treated for
severe cholera. 297
Image 35.3. "Rice Water" excretion of a child with cholera. 298
List of Tables
Table 5.1: Approximate timeline of early development of human vaccines. 40
Table 5.2: Routine vaccinations to be reviewed in the pre travel health
consultation (after WHO, 2005). 41
Table 5.3: Recommendations for Hepatitis B vaccination based on
potential risks for travelers (after WHO, 2005). 43
Table 35.1: Timeline in cholera history. 289
Table 35.2: List of cholera outbreaks in the 21st century. 294 |
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era_facet | Geschichte |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV023044253 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T19:21:49Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:09:41Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780080453590 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016247727 |
oclc_num | 123114826 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 |
physical | XX, 333 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. 24 cm |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Elsevier |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Advances in tourism research |
spelling | Travel medicine tales behind the science ed. by Annelies Wilder-Smith ... 1. ed. Oxford [u.a.] Elsevier 2007 XX, 333 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Advances in tourism research Includes bibliographical references and index Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Travel / Health aspects Communicable Disease Control Immunization Travel Travel Health aspects Tropenmedizin (DE-588)4127753-3 gnd rswk-swf Touristikmedizin (DE-588)4060523-1 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Touristikmedizin (DE-588)4060523-1 s Geschichte z DE-604 Tropenmedizin (DE-588)4127753-3 s b DE-604 Wilder-Smith, Annelies Sonstige oth HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016247727&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Travel medicine tales behind the science Travel / Health aspects Communicable Disease Control Immunization Travel Travel Health aspects Tropenmedizin (DE-588)4127753-3 gnd Touristikmedizin (DE-588)4060523-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4127753-3 (DE-588)4060523-1 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Travel medicine tales behind the science |
title_auth | Travel medicine tales behind the science |
title_exact_search | Travel medicine tales behind the science |
title_exact_search_txtP | Travel medicine tales behind the science |
title_full | Travel medicine tales behind the science ed. by Annelies Wilder-Smith ... |
title_fullStr | Travel medicine tales behind the science ed. by Annelies Wilder-Smith ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Travel medicine tales behind the science ed. by Annelies Wilder-Smith ... |
title_short | Travel medicine |
title_sort | travel medicine tales behind the science |
title_sub | tales behind the science |
topic | Travel / Health aspects Communicable Disease Control Immunization Travel Travel Health aspects Tropenmedizin (DE-588)4127753-3 gnd Touristikmedizin (DE-588)4060523-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Travel / Health aspects Communicable Disease Control Immunization Travel Travel Health aspects Tropenmedizin Touristikmedizin Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016247727&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT wildersmithannelies travelmedicinetalesbehindthescience |