Extremely Incorrect Travel Health Myths – Busted!
We have mentioned some of the
crazy, funny and sometimes disturbing travel myths in our previous articles,
but here we are about to discuss something serious. We love to hear about the
countless travel and about the wanderlust person in you, but often we are
surprised to hear some health myths that everyone has. More surprisingly we all
travel years and years believing it to be true and end up having a bad health
when we return or sometimes even on the trip. Here are some of such myths
busted,
Wrong. Health
insurance provides a helpline number so any worrying symptoms can be discussed
with a clinician. They will also have a list of local clinics where you are
likely to find a doctor who can speak English.
These
days, there is an ever-expanding industry of 'health tourism'. Businessmen have
set up fancy hospitals to attract foreigners to come for hip replacements or
cosmetic surgery, and in the event of an accident you may be taken to one of
these. Often the first thing set up is a drip, so you can’t leave.
Travel
insurers actually have teams of clinicians who ‘rescue’ patients from such
difficulties and can arrange an air ambulance home if needed. It is also
possible to arrange for screened blood.
Unwise. Ambulance
services are far from universal, even in some big cities. In Kathmandu, for
example, there is no number such as 999; you have to find the number of a
reputable hospital, then phone them to find out if they have an ambulance. This
isn’t the kind of research you will want to do at the roadside with a broken
arm or if you are delirious with a high fever.
Sadly
incorrect. There are plenty of insect-borne
infections on offer in the tropics and subtropics, and malaria tablets only
protect you from one of these.
Infections
caught by travellers in very remote destinations may not even have been
properly recorded by medical science, and you really don’t want to be famous
for being the first known case of ‘Pukeyfeverrash Disease’ in the world. Protect
yourself from bites as best you can.
Wrong. Okay,
the EHIC covers basic emergency care in signatory countries in Europe, but do
you know which ones? And are you aware that you’ll normally be expected to pay
up front? Then you will be able to claim some of the money back. And will this
all be invalid post a point anyway.
Incorrect –
any mammal can carry rabies, including bats and monkeys, as the following case
report proves.
A bat flew
against the face of a 34-year-old medical doctor at a campsite in Tsavo West
National Park, Kenya. Afterwards, she noticed two small bleeding wounds on the
side of her nose. She washed the wounds using water, soap and alcohol swabs.
The park wardens and the personnel at the nearby clinic told her that, locally,
rabies was only carried by dogs and cats, but 23 days later her symptoms
started. She died of rabies in a Dutch hospital 45 days after the initial
scratch.
6: ‘If bitten I have to get rabies jabs within a day or two;
maybe I’ll just wait until I get symptoms.’
Dangerously
incorrect. Once the symptoms start, death is
pretty much inevitable. The incubation period, though, is very variable and can
be weeks or months. The closer to the brain, the less time you have. Anyone
with a rabies-prone wound should go for the jabs as soon as possible but it is
never too late – unless symptoms have started.
I
disagree, although usually you do know if
you’ve been exposed to rabies, so could evacuate for treatment if you get a
bite or scratch. Immunisation (after the primary course and one booster) lasts
for life, however, so unless you are a once-in-a-lifetime traveller, I suggest
it is a good investment. It gives you time and peace of mind.
Not
really. International hotels can feel
like you’ve entered a sterile bubble, but the organisms that cause outbreaks of
legionnaires’ disease, for example, can lurk in the air conditioning.
You
probably also heat-acclimatise less efficiently if you hide away in rooms with
the A/C on. In spacious hotels you are less likely to acquire infections spread
by droplets in crowded places, but hotels are full of people so
they’re hardly sterile.
No,
it’s not that easy. Whether or not you get ill after
eating food prepared by others depends on how the chefs handle the food
and how thoroughly it is cooked.
Big hotels
often encourage guests to take food from a buffet – it is easier for them – but
this may have been kept only lukewarm or prepared hours before you eat. If it’s
contaminated during or soon after preparation, keeping food at
blood-temperature over small heaters will allow bacteria to reproduce
to a dangerous level, and the result is food poisoning. Order à la carte, shun
salads and garnish, and ensure your food is piping hot.
Nope. The
evidence is that travelers’ diarrhea comes most commonly from unhygienic food
handling rather than the odd drop of washing-up water or gulp from a tap
Remember the ‘peel it, boil
it, cook it or forget it’ rule. But do try to travel with your own water bottle
(or consider buying a LifeStraw), so you don’t contribute to the global plastic
water-bottle disposal crisis.
Please take this article
seriously and implement these suggestions before you are on for your next trip,
like ‘precaution is better than cure’ so is ‘smartness better than being over-smart’.
Have safe trips throughout life. Cheers!











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