Health |
A yellow fever certificate is required for all travellers arriving from infected areas. Travellers should ensure their polio vaccinations are up to date as there was a Polio outbreak in July 2006. There is a malaria risk in the northern region during the rainy season, from January to April. HIV/AIDS is prevalent and precautions are essential. Cholera outbreaks do occur and visitors should drink or use only boiled or bottled water and avoid ice in drinks. There has been an increase in the incidence of rabies among dogs in Windhoek. There are good medical facilities in Windhoek, but medical insurance is essential as treatment is expensive. Travellers to Namibia should take medical advice at least four weeks prior to departure.
Malaria
General considerations: Malaria is a common and life-threatening disease in many tropical and subtropical areas. It is currently endemic in over 100 countries, which are visited by more than 125 million international travellers every year. Each year many international travellers fall ill with malaria while visiting countries where the disease is endemic, and well over 10,000 fall ill after returning home. Fever occurring in a traveller within three months of leaving a malaria-endemic area is a medical emergency and should be investigated urgently. Cause: Human malaria is caused by four different species of the protozoan parasite Plasmodium: Plasmodium falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae. Transmission: The malaria parasite is transmitted by various species of Anopheles mosquitoes, which bite mainly between sunset and sunrise. Nature of the disease: Malaria is an acute febrile illness with an incubation period of 7 days or longer. Thus, a febrile illness developing less than one week after the first possible exposure is not malaria. The most severe form is caused by P. falciparum, in which variable clinical features include fever, chills, headache, muscular aching and weakness, vomiting, cough, diarrhoea and abdominal pain; other symptoms related to organ failure may supervene, such as: acute renal failure, generalized convulsions, circulatory collapse, followed by coma and death. It is estimated that about 1% of patients with P. falciparum infection die of the disease. The initial symptoms, which may be mild, may not be easy to recognize as being due to malaria. It is important that the possibility of falciparum malaria is considered in all cases of unexplained fever starting at any time between the seventh day of first possible exposure to malaria and three months (or, rarely, later) after the last possible exposure, and any individual who experiences a fever in this interval should immediately seek diagnosis and effective treatment. Early diagnosis and appropriate treatment can be life-saving. Falciparum malaria may be fatal if treatment is delayed beyond 24 hours. A blood sample should be examined for malaria parasites. If no parasites are found in the first blood film but symptoms persist, a series of blood samples should be taken and examined at 6-12-hour intervals. Pregnant women, young children and elderly travellers are particularly at risk. Malaria in pregnant travellers increases the risk of maternal death, miscarriage, stillbirth and neonatal death. The forms of malaria caused by other Plasmodium species are less severe and rarely life-threatening. Prevention and treatment of falciparum malaria are becoming more difficult because P. falciparum is increasingly resistant to various antimalarial drugs. Of the other malaria species, drug resistance has to date been reported for P. vivax, mainly from Indonesia (Irian Jaya) and Papua New Guinea, with more sporadic cases reported from Guyana. P. vivax with declining sensitivity has been reported for Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, India, Myanmar, the Republic of Korea, and Thailand. P. malariae resistant to chloroquine has been reported from Indonesia. Geographical distribution: The risk for travellers of contracting malaria is highly variable from country to country and even between areas in a country. In many endemic countries of Latin America and the Caribbean, Asia and the Mediterranean region, the main urban areas, but not necessarily the outskirts of towns, are free of malaria transmission. However, malaria can occur in main urban areas in Africa and India. There is usually less risk of the disease at altitudes above 1,500 metres, but in favourable climatic conditions it can occur at altitudes up to almost 3,000 metres. The risk of infection may also vary according to the season, being highest at the end of the rainy season. There is no risk of malaria in many tourist destinations in South-East Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean. Source: WHO.
Back to TopCholera
Cause: Vibrio cholerae bacteria,
serogroups O1 and O139. Transmission: Infection occurs
through ingestion of food or water contaminated directly or
indirectly by faeces or vomit of infected persons. Cholera affects
only humans; there is no insect vector or animal reservoir host.
Nature of the disease: An acute enteric (intestine) disease
varying in severity. Most infections are asymptomatic (i.e. do not
cause any illness). In mild cases, diarrhoea occurs without other
symptoms. In severe cases, there is sudden onset of profuse watery
diarrhoea with nausea and vomiting and rapid development of
dehydration. In severe untreated cases, death may occur within a
few hours due to dehydration leading to circulatory collapse.
Geographical distribution: Cholera occurs mainly in poor
countries with inadequate sanitation and lack of clean drinking
water and in war-torn countries where the infrastructure may have
broken down. Many developing countries are affected, particularly
those in Africa and Asia, and to a lesser extent those in central
and south America. Risk for travellers: The risk of cholera
is very low for most travellers, even in countries where cholera
epidemics occur. Humanitarian relief workers in disaster areas and
refugee camps are at risk.
Prophylaxis (protective treatment): Oral cholera vaccines
for use by travellers and those in occupational risk groups are
available in some countries. Precautions: As for other
diarrhoeal diseases. All precautions should be taken to avoid
consumption of potentially contaminated food, drink and drinking
water. Oral rehydration salts should be carried to combat
dehydration in case of severe diarrhoea. Source: WHO.
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