Fecal‐orally transmitted diseases among travelers are decreasing due to better hygienic standards at travel destination

GG Baaten, GJB Sonder… - Journal of travel …, 2010 - academic.oup.com
GG Baaten, GJB Sonder, MFS Van Der Loeff, RA Coutinho, A Van Den Hoek
Journal of travel medicine, 2010academic.oup.com
Objective To evaluate whether changes in attack rates of fecal‐orally transmitted diseases
among travelers are related to changes in pretravel vaccination practices or better hygienic
standards at travel destination. Methods National surveillance data on all laboratory‐
confirmed cases of travel‐related hepatitis A, shigellosis, and typhoid fever diagnosed in the
Netherlands from 1995 to 2006 were matched with the number of Dutch travelers to
developing countries to calculate region‐specific annual attack rates. Trends in attack rates …
Objective
To evaluate whether changes in attack rates of fecal‐orally transmitted diseases among travelers are related to changes in pretravel vaccination practices or better hygienic standards at travel destination.
Methods
National surveillance data on all laboratory‐confirmed cases of travel‐related hepatitis A, shigellosis, and typhoid fever diagnosed in the Netherlands from 1995 to 2006 were matched with the number of Dutch travelers to developing countries to calculate region‐specific annual attack rates. Trends in attack rates of non‐vaccine‐preventable shigellosis were compared with those of vaccine‐preventable hepatitis A and typhoid fever. Trends were also compared with three markers for hygienic standards of the local population at travel destinations, drawn from the United Nations Development Programme database: the human development index, the sanitation index, and the water source index.
Results
Attack rates among Dutch travelers to developing regions declined for hepatitis A, shigellosis, and typhoid fever. Region‐specific trends in attack rates of shigellosis resembled trends of hepatitis A and typhoid fever. Declining attack rates of the three fecal‐orally transmitted diseases correlated with improvements in socioeconomic, sanitary, and water supply conditions of the local population at travel destination.
Conclusions
These findings suggest that improved hygienic standards at travel destination strongly contributed to the overall decline in attack rates of fecal‐orally transmitted diseases among visiting travelers.
Oxford University Press