BALTIMORE, MD – 2/28/2011 – The Africa Travel Association (ATA) will hold its 4th Annual U.S. - Africa Tourism Seminar on March 11th, 2011 at the Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C. The event’s keynote addresses are presented by The Honorable Amina Ali, Ambassador Extraordinary & Plenipotentiary of the African Union to the United States of America and Mr. William Fitzgerald, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, Bureau of African Affairs, US State Department.
The seminar will also feature an impressive line-up of speakers and presenters that include the ATA’s Executive Director, Edward Bergman, Passport Health’s Corporate Director of Business Development, Jorge Eduardo Castillo, Ethiopian Airlines’ Director of Sales, Kagnew F. Asfaw as well as Expedia Travel’s Director of Market Management, Diego J. Lofeudo, among others.
Passport Health, the largest private provider of travel medical services and immunizations, provides destination-specific counseling and information to travelers before their international trip. With over 170 locations across the U.S., Passport Health is the expert in immunizations. “Whether you are traveling for business or pleasure we can prepare you for your trip with destination-specific travel information, immunizations, travel shots, specialty travel products, and international travel health insurance in all our travel clinics”, notes Castillo, who is also an international board member of the ATA. “We are excited to be a part of this international seminar to network with other industry leaders. We have seen an increase in travel to African nations and we truly believe that this is a trend that will only increase”. In collaboration with the ATA, Castillo organized a networking event in October of 2010. “Rethink Africa” was a huge success, and it created awareness for African nations and the opportunities they have to offer.
The Annual U.S. - Africa Tourism Seminar is a must-attend event for tourism industry professionals, travel industry partners, distinguished diplomats and travel enthusiasts. The Travel & Adventure Show is the event’s premier sponsor. This year Passport Health has been represented at the Travel & Adventure Shows in Chicago by Corey McVey, Executive Director of Passport Health Chicago.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Passport Health to be represented at the 2011 U.S.-Africa Tourism Seminar in Washington, D.C.
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Monday, February 14, 2011
Seriously Sick Overseas
It was love at first bite.
Proving that under the skin we're all the same, actor George Clooney revealed last month that he had been stricken with malaria on a recent trip to Sudan -- and that it was his second time to get it.
He made light of the disease when interviewed on television, laughing off his illness: "I guess the mosquito in Juba looked at me and thought I was the bar," he told CNN. He also was quoted by his publicist saying that proper medication can turn "the most lethal condition in Africa" into "a bad 10 days instead of a death sentence."
But malaria is no joke.
Despite international efforts to eradicate it, malaria kills 890,000 people every year, mostly children in Africa. It makes 250 million people sick each year. Common in Africa, southern Asia, South America and parts of the Caribbean, malaria is caused by a parasite spread by night-biting mosquitoes.
And yes, it does affect travelers -- about 30,000 a year, according to the World Health Organization.

While mild cases resolve with shaking, chills, fever, vomiting and jaundice, untreated malaria can develop into seizures, coma, kidney failure and death. It also can "hide" when travelers come back, striking weeks or up to a year later, showing up as a mysterious unexplained fever.
But that is not the only ailment unprepared travelers can contract.
A cavalier attitude
A new study published in the Journal of Travel Medicine in December found that 44% of international travelers don't seek any health advice before their trips. Only 36% carry medication against travelers' diarrhea. Just 20% of people traveling to countries with malaria risk take medication to prevent it.
The reason people behave with such apathy? "I just think it is ignorance," says Dr. Bruce Kane, medical director of Passport Health, which has six locations in Michigan.
"I don't think travel agents even mention the thought of protection. And it is only if the travelers wonder themselves and seek out their physician who refers them to us that they would know," he says.
Of 508 confirmed cases where U.S. civilian travelers contracted malaria abroad in 2008, the CDC found that 70% had not taken medication to prevent it.
While it's unclear whether Clooney was taking malaria preventive meds, his plight points out the cavalier attitude many travelers have in general about travel health.
A long list of ills
The most common health risks to travelers, of course, come not from malaria but from accidental injuries, aggravating a pre-existing health problem, or picking up travelers' diarrhea, respiratory infection or a stomach bug.
Those are bad enough.
"It wrecks your vacation because you can't eat, you have diarrhea and are throwing up at the same time," says Yvonne Boike of Berkley, who contracted the Norovirus stomach bug on a Mediterranean cruise -- the only time in 15 cruises that she has gotten sick. "It lasts for a couple of days."
But if you peruse a catalog of hideous illnesses you can get while traveling to the world's exotic locales, it's enough to make you hide under the bed. The Plague. River blindness. Rift Valley fever. Yellow fever. Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever. Q fever. Sandfly fever. Typhoid. Cholera. Tuberculosis. Meningitis. Polio. Measles. Hepatitis. AIDS. Encephalitis. And on and on.
Luckily, most travelers never come in contact with such a scary fate. And not every traveler needs to be immunized against everything.
"I spend more time talking people out of vaccinations than into them," says Dr. Jeffrey Band, director of infectious diseases and international medicine at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak. He said while yellow fever, a fatal disease, has a well-tolerated immunization profile and malaria prevention is common sense, something like Japanese encephalitis is so rare as to make the immunization advisable for only certain travelers.
Mosquitoes don't care
The CDC has a traveler's page ( www.cdc.gov/travel) on which you can check real-time health alerts and suggested immunizations for individual countries. For instance, Sudan, where Clooney traveled, shows that travelers should take steps to protect against malaria, yellow fever, typhoid, hepatitis, polio and rabies.
Ironically, those least prepared for health risks when traveling abroad include travelers who are visiting friends or family, those on vacation or who are traveling less than 14 days -- in other words, casual travelers, according to the recent study in the Journal of Travel Medicine.
"Those visiting family or friends have been one of our biggest problems" when it comes to malaria prevention, Band says.
But mosquitoes don't care if you're family, a friend or even George Clooney. They just want your blood.
Article by: Ellen Creager: 313-222-6498 or ecreager@freepress.com . After nearly 8 years as travel writer, she has had every travelers' immunization except those for rabies and Japanese encephalitis.
Proving that under the skin we're all the same, actor George Clooney revealed last month that he had been stricken with malaria on a recent trip to Sudan -- and that it was his second time to get it.
He made light of the disease when interviewed on television, laughing off his illness: "I guess the mosquito in Juba looked at me and thought I was the bar," he told CNN. He also was quoted by his publicist saying that proper medication can turn "the most lethal condition in Africa" into "a bad 10 days instead of a death sentence."
But malaria is no joke.
Despite international efforts to eradicate it, malaria kills 890,000 people every year, mostly children in Africa. It makes 250 million people sick each year. Common in Africa, southern Asia, South America and parts of the Caribbean, malaria is caused by a parasite spread by night-biting mosquitoes.
And yes, it does affect travelers -- about 30,000 a year, according to the World Health Organization.

While mild cases resolve with shaking, chills, fever, vomiting and jaundice, untreated malaria can develop into seizures, coma, kidney failure and death. It also can "hide" when travelers come back, striking weeks or up to a year later, showing up as a mysterious unexplained fever.
But that is not the only ailment unprepared travelers can contract.
A cavalier attitude
A new study published in the Journal of Travel Medicine in December found that 44% of international travelers don't seek any health advice before their trips. Only 36% carry medication against travelers' diarrhea. Just 20% of people traveling to countries with malaria risk take medication to prevent it.
The reason people behave with such apathy? "I just think it is ignorance," says Dr. Bruce Kane, medical director of Passport Health, which has six locations in Michigan.
"I don't think travel agents even mention the thought of protection. And it is only if the travelers wonder themselves and seek out their physician who refers them to us that they would know," he says.
Of 508 confirmed cases where U.S. civilian travelers contracted malaria abroad in 2008, the CDC found that 70% had not taken medication to prevent it.
While it's unclear whether Clooney was taking malaria preventive meds, his plight points out the cavalier attitude many travelers have in general about travel health.
A long list of ills
The most common health risks to travelers, of course, come not from malaria but from accidental injuries, aggravating a pre-existing health problem, or picking up travelers' diarrhea, respiratory infection or a stomach bug.
Those are bad enough.
"It wrecks your vacation because you can't eat, you have diarrhea and are throwing up at the same time," says Yvonne Boike of Berkley, who contracted the Norovirus stomach bug on a Mediterranean cruise -- the only time in 15 cruises that she has gotten sick. "It lasts for a couple of days."
But if you peruse a catalog of hideous illnesses you can get while traveling to the world's exotic locales, it's enough to make you hide under the bed. The Plague. River blindness. Rift Valley fever. Yellow fever. Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever. Q fever. Sandfly fever. Typhoid. Cholera. Tuberculosis. Meningitis. Polio. Measles. Hepatitis. AIDS. Encephalitis. And on and on.
Luckily, most travelers never come in contact with such a scary fate. And not every traveler needs to be immunized against everything.
"I spend more time talking people out of vaccinations than into them," says Dr. Jeffrey Band, director of infectious diseases and international medicine at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak. He said while yellow fever, a fatal disease, has a well-tolerated immunization profile and malaria prevention is common sense, something like Japanese encephalitis is so rare as to make the immunization advisable for only certain travelers.
Mosquitoes don't care
The CDC has a traveler's page ( www.cdc.gov/travel) on which you can check real-time health alerts and suggested immunizations for individual countries. For instance, Sudan, where Clooney traveled, shows that travelers should take steps to protect against malaria, yellow fever, typhoid, hepatitis, polio and rabies.
Ironically, those least prepared for health risks when traveling abroad include travelers who are visiting friends or family, those on vacation or who are traveling less than 14 days -- in other words, casual travelers, according to the recent study in the Journal of Travel Medicine.
"Those visiting family or friends have been one of our biggest problems" when it comes to malaria prevention, Band says.
But mosquitoes don't care if you're family, a friend or even George Clooney. They just want your blood.
Article by: Ellen Creager: 313-222-6498 or ecreager@freepress.com . After nearly 8 years as travel writer, she has had every travelers' immunization except those for rabies and Japanese encephalitis.
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Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Moscow Schools Shut Down Due to Flu
MOSCOW (AFP) – Moscow and at least two other cities shut all their elementary schools Saturday to help fight one of the worst flu outbreaks to hit central Russia in more than a decade, officials said.
The Moscow closure would affect more than 1,500 schools.
Education officials said this meant that nearly 500,000 children would get an unscheduled week-long vacation in the first such shutdown to strike the Russian capital since 1998.
"Even today, some classes are already missing half their students" an official with Moscow's health control service told the Komsomolskaya Pravda daily.
"The situation in Moscow is relatively favorable compared to what it is in the other regions" of central Russia, Alexander Gavrilov said.
Moscow's kindergartens would remain open and older children would not be affected. But officials have issued instruction for parents to take extra care with younger children and avoid spending too much time with them in public places.
The Moscow education department's order covers both public and private schools.
The instructions were issued after schools reported empty class rooms in which lessons were being taught to just a handful of kids at a time.
"A lot of our students are out. So it just made sense to close the schools instead of teaching three or four kids and then having everyone else catch up," one Moscow school director told the Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper.
Officials said some 300 schools had already closed their doors across Russia by Friday evening.
News reports said that a similar week-long closure has also been ordered in the industrial Ural city of Chelyabinsk and Russia's northern Far East town of Yakutsk
The outbreak was accompanied by new reports of the swine flu spreading through Moscow and other major cities.
There were were 93 H1N1 infections but no deaths reported in Moscow.
The Moscow closure would affect more than 1,500 schools.
Education officials said this meant that nearly 500,000 children would get an unscheduled week-long vacation in the first such shutdown to strike the Russian capital since 1998.
"Even today, some classes are already missing half their students" an official with Moscow's health control service told the Komsomolskaya Pravda daily.
"The situation in Moscow is relatively favorable compared to what it is in the other regions" of central Russia, Alexander Gavrilov said.
Moscow's kindergartens would remain open and older children would not be affected. But officials have issued instruction for parents to take extra care with younger children and avoid spending too much time with them in public places.
The Moscow education department's order covers both public and private schools.
The instructions were issued after schools reported empty class rooms in which lessons were being taught to just a handful of kids at a time.
"A lot of our students are out. So it just made sense to close the schools instead of teaching three or four kids and then having everyone else catch up," one Moscow school director told the Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper.
Officials said some 300 schools had already closed their doors across Russia by Friday evening.
News reports said that a similar week-long closure has also been ordered in the industrial Ural city of Chelyabinsk and Russia's northern Far East town of Yakutsk
The outbreak was accompanied by new reports of the swine flu spreading through Moscow and other major cities.
There were were 93 H1N1 infections but no deaths reported in Moscow.
Posted by
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