Travelers’ Reported Preventive Health Behavior in Jinja, Uganda

<strong>Introduction:</strong> Increasing international travel to low-income areas is confronting travelers with new health threats. This study investigated international travelers’ health advice, behavior, and information needs in a low-income setting.<br /><strong>Methods:&...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Travis Bias, Carl Allen, Anna Buckley, Alex Hillman, Tamsin Lillie, Immaculate Goima, Gissela Nyakunga, Melanie Willimann, Christopher Sanford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Travel Medicine Center of Iran 2016-11-01
Series:International Journal of Travel Medicine and Global Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijtmgh.com/article_34215_626fe829104447598cb6bc6b080b4f81.pdf
Description
Summary:<strong>Introduction:</strong> Increasing international travel to low-income areas is confronting travelers with new health threats. This study investigated international travelers’ health advice, behavior, and information needs in a low-income setting.<br /><strong>Methods:</strong> This is a descriptive and cross-sectional study. Between October 27–31, 2014, 127 semi-structured surveys were conducted in Jinja, Uganda with international travelers selected by central-location intercept convenience sampling. Data was analyzed using SPSS software.<br /><strong>Results:</strong> Among all the 127 respondents, 88% sought pre-travel medical advice. The surveys revealed a pool of many traveling longer than six months (32.3%) with 72.3% of those being for volunteer purposes, while 41.2% of those traveling for less than one month (40.2%) were volunteers. Compliance with malaria chemoprophylaxis was reported by 94.1% of those traveling less than one month and 53.7% of those traveling longer than six months. Malaria topped the list of travel concerns among travelers, with sexually transmitted infections and Ebola virus disease cited as additional concerns.<br /><strong>Conclusion:</strong> Long-term travelers were heavily represented in the current sample, perhaps due to current events harming short-term tourism. Consistent with prior research, compliance with malaria prophylaxis decreased with length of travel as younger respondents trended toward poorer compliance. This survey highlights the need to accurately define “traveler” and its specific categories to better assess health risks for future travelers.
ISSN:2322-1100
2476-5759