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- Travelers Health | CDC - Centers for Disease Control and . . .
CDC Travelers’ Health Branch provides updated travel information, notices, and vaccine requirements to inform international travelers and provide guidance to the clinicians who serve them Skip directly to site content Skip directly to page options Skip directly to A-Z link Skip directly to A-Z link Skip directly to A-Z link
- Foreign travel advice - GOV. UK
Get advice and warnings about travel abroad, including entry requirements, safety and security, health risks and legal differences
- Need travel vaccines? Plan ahead. | Travelers Health | CDC
If yellow fever vaccine is recommended or required for your destination, you’ll need to go to a vaccine center authorized to give yellow fever vaccinations Many yellow fever vaccine centers also provide other pre-travel health care services Find an authorized US yellow fever vaccine center Examples of Vaccines
- Catch-up vaccination - The Australian Immunisation Handbook
Use this to help interpret documentation from overseas vaccination to confirm which vaccines a person arriving from overseas may have received Note that vaccines received overseas may have different brand names, contain different antigens in combination or be given in a different schedule
- Overseas immunisations and processing history forms in the . . .
Where a vaccine has been given overseas and the brand name is not known or recognised in Australia, staff must record the vaccination using the generic antigen codes Where possible, staff should use the generic combination vaccine code For example, generic MMR rather than generic measles, generic mumps, and generic rubella
- Destinations | Travelers Health | CDC
The majority of measles cases imported into the United States occur in unvaccinated U S residents who become infected during international travel A list of countries with confirmed measles outbreaks can be found on the Global Measles Travel Health Notice (THN)
- Dangerous measles case hits North Carolina from overseas
These outbreaks often stem from declining vaccination coverage, vaccine hesitancy, or disruptions to routine immunization programs caused by conflicts, natural disasters, or public health emergencies
- Think Travel Vaccine Guide | Travelers Health | CDC
Ask your patients if they plan on any international travel Make sure they are up-to-date on all routine vaccines before their trip Depending on their planned destination, they may need additional travel vaccines or medications Think about: Chikungunya; Cholera; Hepatitis A; Hepatitis B; Japanese encephalitis; Malaria
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