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#1
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| Anyone have experience with or an opinion about the risk of malaria in Roatan? -- Jeanne "Laugh at yourself first, before anyone else can." --Elsa Maxwell |
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#2
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| "bjeanneb" <bjeanneb@satx.rr.com> wrote in message news:6KDFc.10097$T72.7992@fe2.texas.rr.com... > Anyone have experience with or an opinion about the risk of malaria in > Roatan? Yep. www.cdc.gov |
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#3
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| On Sat, 03 Jul 2004 19:24:50 +0000, bjeanneb wrote: > Anyone have experience with or an opinion about the risk of malaria in > Roatan? I used an anti-malarial the first time I went. It made my skin very photo reactive and I felt...constipated for days. The left side of my forehead was darkened for so long you could easily see the progress of my hairline receding. I haven't used it on subsequent trips to Roatan, and I haven't contracted malaria (yet). |
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#4
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| > > www.cdc.gov > stands for Can't Diagnose Crap.... at least when it comes to tropical deseases. They still recommend Lariam and Chloroquine, both of which have been shown to be ineffective in most parts of the world. You would do just about as well drinking quinine laced tonic water (and some Gin and it would be better). Latest studies suggest artemisin derivatives, which of course the other bastion of ineffective government buracracy, the FDA has not approved despite worldwide testing lasting more than a decade. |
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#5
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| "bjeanneb" <bjeanneb@satx.rr.com> wrote in message news:6KDFc.10097$T72.7992@fe2.texas.rr.com... > Anyone have experience with or an opinion about the risk of malaria in > Roatan? > -- > Jeanne > Rural areas, including resort areas on Roatán and other Bay Islands are areas of risk for malaria. Chloroquine is the recommended Rx. The adult dose is 500 mg chloroquine phosphate once a week. You should take the first dose of chloroquine 1 week before arrival in the malaria-risk area, take your dose once a week while in the risk area, and take your dose once a week for 4 weeks after leaving the risk area. |
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#6
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| x-no-archive: yes "Randy Buckner" <Randybuckner@att.net> wrote in message news:<WDLFc.187596$Gx4.51129@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net>... > Rural areas, including resort areas on Roatán and other Bay Islands are > areas of risk for malaria. I agree, but is the malaria risk big enough to outweigh the risk of side-effects (especially in scuba divers)? C. |
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#7
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| "C. Josef" <c.josef@workmail.co.za> wrote in message news:5a0c4adf.0407062134.7bccba35@posting.google.c om... > x-no-archive: yes > > "Randy Buckner" <Randybuckner@att.net> wrote in message news:<WDLFc.187596$Gx4.51129@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net>... > > > Rural areas, including resort areas on Roatán and other Bay Islands are > > areas of risk for malaria. > > I agree, but is the malaria risk big enough to outweigh the risk of > side-effects (especially in scuba divers)? > > C. Excellent question, but no satisfactory answer. Everyone has to weigh the decision for themselves. I can't take the risk because I don't have sick leave -- if I don't work I don't have income, being self-employed, plus my patients lose a doc. If a person uses DEET repellants and limits night time exposure, I'd think the risk would be very low indeed. Anecdotally, I have never have any side-effects from the meds. |
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#8
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| On Thu, 08 Jul 2004 17:58:11 GMT, "Randy Buckner" <Randybuckner@att.net> wrote: > >"C. Josef" <c.josef@workmail.co.za> wrote in message >news:5a0c4adf.0407062134.7bccba35@posting.google. com... >> x-no-archive: yes >> >> "Randy Buckner" <Randybuckner@att.net> wrote in message >news:<WDLFc.187596$Gx4.51129@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net>... >> >> > Rural areas, including resort areas on Roatán and other Bay Islands are >> > areas of risk for malaria. >> >> I agree, but is the malaria risk big enough to outweigh the risk of >> side-effects (especially in scuba divers)? >> >> C. > >Excellent question, but no satisfactory answer. Everyone has to weigh the >decision for themselves. I can't take the risk because I don't have sick >leave -- if I don't work I don't have income, being self-employed, plus my >patients lose a doc. If a person uses DEET repellants and limits night time >exposure, I'd think the risk would be very low indeed. Anecdotally, I have >never have any side-effects from the meds. > Haven't there been reports of psychosis with laramine? Now THAT would be an adverse side effect. I know I saw something in an Alert Diver a while back that talked about some of the sides with the various malaria meds. -- dillon When I was a kid, I thought the angel's name was Hark and the horse's name was Bob. |
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#9
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| x-no-archive: yes Dillon Pyron <dmpyronINVALID@austin.rr.com> wrote in message news:<j2jre053gp89dn2l3ubp3dkjo3qhtqpjnh@4ax.com>. .. > Haven't there been reports of psychosis with laramine? Lariam frequently causes neuropsychiatric side-effects: http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/CID...25/010125.html http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/art...medid=14604928 It's considered unsafe for divers by the Divers' Alert Network (South Africa): http://www.dansa.org/medical/medication.html "4 divers (on four separate occasions) report symptoms to DAN's hotline that are indistinguishable from decompression illness after taking Lariam (mefloquine) for malaria prophylaxis. Symptoms ranged from muscle aches, dizziness and pins and needles to personality changes and psychosis. Two divers actually received unsuccessful recompression therapy before the association with Lariam was made." http://www.dansa.org/medical/malaria_prev.htm "Lariam is considered unsafe for divers & pilots. It is contra-indicated in Epilepsy but is a good first choice for other travellers." The New Zealand Medical Journal points out: "As diving medical physicians at the Royal New Zealand Naval hyperbaric medicine unit we would strongly advise that mefloquine should not be used as chemoprophylaxis for [...] scuba diving [...]." (Dr. David Wright, New Zealand Medical Journal, Dec 8, 1995, p. 514) The product information by the manufacturer points out: "Caution should be exercised with regard to activities requiring alertness and fine motor coordination such as driving, piloting aircraft, operating machinery, and deep-sea diving, as dizziness, a loss of balance, or other disorders of the central or peripheral nervous system have been reported during and following the use of Lariam. These effects may occur after therapy is discontinued due to the long half-life of the drug." >Now THAT would > be an adverse side effect. I'm not intending to problematize chloroquine more than necessary, but as a matter of fact it can cause side-effects, too. And in some cases they can be neuropsychiatric side-effects just like mefloquine (Lariam): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q..._uids=15235536 Of course any risk of side-effects has to be weighed out against the risk of malaria. But how big is the malaria risk in Honduras? It's a fact that it's considered as smaller than the risk of serious side-effects by both the Swiss, German and Austrian guidelines for the prevention of malaria: http://www.bag.admin.ch/infekt/publ/...ia_bu14_03.pdf [French] Personally I would not take prophylactic malaria drugs for Honduras. However, I would definetly take prophylactic pills for a similar trip to Kenya. C. |
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#10
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| x-no-archive: yes "Randy Buckner" <Randybuckner@att.net> wrote in message news:<TWfHc.73395$OB3.48033@bgtnsc05-news.ops.worldnet.att.net>... > Excellent question, but no satisfactory answer. Everyone has to weigh the > decision for themselves. I agree, but you also have to rely on statistics. >I can't take the risk because I don't have sick > leave -- if I don't work I don't have income, being self-employed, plus my > patients lose a doc. If you suffer serious side-effects from a malaria drug the situation is similar. The same applies if you suffer milder side-effects that nevertheless can cause a diving accident. >If a person uses DEET repellants and limits night time > exposure, I'd think the risk would be very low indeed. Compared to a country such as Kenya, the risk is indeed very, very low. In fact I'm unaware of a single case of malaria from Honduras reported via Tropnet Europe even though doctors in Europe frequently don't prescribe prophylactic medications for this part of the world: http://www.tropnet.net I'm unaware of any published statistics by the CDC, but I would very much like to know how many travelers returned from Honduras to the United States with malaria in recent years. Is there any such case at all? >Anecdotally, I have > never have any side-effects from the meds. If somebody has taken a medication several times before and hasn't suffered any side-effects at all, the situation might become different. But the statistics clearly show malaria drugs are not always well tolerated. Therefore the risks and the benefits have to be weighed out against each other. I strongly doubt prophylactic medications for Honduras are based on a realistic risk-benefit ratio. C. |
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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| roatan | jacklondon | (Italian) | 10 | 04-11-2007 03:25 PM |
| Kenya & Malaria | peter lucy | Kenya | 7 | 03-27-2007 12:13 AM |
| Malaria in Exuma | Dillon Pyron | Bahamas | 0 | 03-26-2007 10:54 PM |
| Kenya & Malaria | peter lucy | Kenya | 2 | 03-26-2007 10:19 PM |
| Roatan | Alan Sykes | Honduras | 1 | 03-26-2007 09:46 PM |