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6-year review of 1Redivi: a prospective registry of imported infectious diseases in Spain


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Title:
6-year review of 1Redivi: a prospective registry of imported infectious diseases in Spain
Authors:
Torrús, Diego  
Pérez Molina, José A.
López Polín, Ana
Treviño Maruri, Begoña  
Molina, Israel
Goikoetxea, Josune  
Díaz Menéndez, Marta
Calabuig, Eva  
Benito, Agustín
López-Vélez, Rogelio  
Editor:
Oxford University Press
Department:
Departamentos de la UMH::Agroquímica y Medio Ambiente
Issue Date:
2017-04
URI:
https://hdl.handle.net/11000/35439
Abstract:
Background: Understanding and detecting imported diseases is a priority in the prevention and management of prevalent and emergent infectious diseases acquired abroad. TheþRedivi network measures the burden of imported infections in Spain and is essential for closing the gap in travel medicine. Methods: Demographic characteristics, travel information, syndromes and confirmed travel-related diagnoses were registered in a standardised online database. Results: A total of 10 767 cases of imported infectious diseases were registered between October 2009 and December 2015. Of these, 60.8% of cases were immigrants seen for the first time after arrival, 20.6% were travellers, and 18.4% were individuals visiting friends and relatives (VFR [immigrants and travellers]). The median time between arrival and medical consultation was 5.5 years for immigrants, 2.0 weeks for travellers, 3.1 weeks for VFRtravellers and 11.4 for VFR-immigrants. The most prevalent diagnoses were Chagas disease in immigrants and nonspecific acute diarrhoea in travellers. Malaria by P. falciparum was one of the most prevalent diagnoses among VFR. More than half the travellers saw a physician before travelling, although one-third of those for whom antimalarial medication was indicated did not take their medication correctly. As for VFR, only 10.4% of VFR-immigrants and 32.5% of VFR-travellers sought pre-travel advice. Only 23 and 21%, respectively, of those for whom antimalarial prophylaxis was indicated took the medication properly. Conclusions:þRedivi provides a clear picture of the prevalence of imported infectious diseases among travellers and immigrants in Spain. The data collected could be used to improve everyday health care provided to travellers and immigrants after travel, to guide pre-travel consultations and to monitor the potential occurrence of tropical or exotic infectious diseases.
Keywords/Subjects:
Traveller
migrants
+Redivi
travel
network
Type of document:
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Access rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1093/jtm/tax035
Appears in Collections:
Artículos Agroquímica y Medio Ambiente



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