Malaria prophylaxis policy for travellers from Europe to the Indian Sub Continent

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Abstract

Analysis of malaria imported into eight European countries from the Indian sub-continent (ISC) (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka) led to a consensus statement on the use of chemoprophylaxis within TropNetEurop. The proportion of cases from the ISC in 2004 ranged from 1.4%-4.6% of total imported cases. Plasmodium falciparum cases reported from the eight countries was only 23 (13% of all cases from the region). Total malaria reports between 1999-2004 fell from 317 to 180. The risk of malaria in UK residents visiting the region was > 1 case per 1,000 years exposed. The group recommended non-selective prescribing of chemoprophylaxis for visitors to India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka should be dropped. © 2006 Behrens et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Behrens, R. H., Bisoffi, Z., Björkman, A., Gascon, J., Hatz, C., Jelinek, T., … Voltersvik, P. (2006, February 1). Malaria prophylaxis policy for travellers from Europe to the Indian Sub Continent. Malaria Journal. https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-5-7

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