1.Travel Medicine : Recommendation for Travelers to Tropical Areas.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 1999;42(7):704-709
No abstract available.
Travel Medicine*
2.Pre-travel medical consultation for international travelers.
Korean Journal of Medicine 2005;69(4):347-356
No abstract available.
Travel Medicine
3.Travel Medicine Outlook Update.
Korean Journal of Aerospace and Environmental Medicine 2001;11(2):67-76
No abstract available.
Travel Medicine*
4.Health advice for international travelers.
Korean Journal of Medicine 2006;71(1):116-119
No abstract available.
Malaria
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Travel Medicine
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Vaccination
5.Travel Medicine: Prevention of infectious diseases during travel.
Korean Journal of Medicine 2000;59(3):254-260
No abstract available.
Communicable Diseases*
;
Travel Medicine*
6.What It Takes To Set Up Travel Health Services: A Review From Countries With Established Service
Muhammad Haikal Bin Ghazali ; Shamsul Azhar Bin Shah ; Mohd Rizal Bin Abd Manaf
Malaysian Journal of Public Health Medicine 2017;17(3):47-57
As air travelling now becomes cheaper and available to almost all people of any walk of life, travelling across international borders is fast becoming a lifestyle of many. Having travel health service as part of health care services is important to address the issues of travel related illnesses among travellers. However, lacks of published guidelines pertaining to travel health service rendering many countries to overlook its importance. The aim of this paper is to review published literatures and authoritative websites on the components needed to develop guideline to establish travel health services. A systematic literature search was done using pre-specified keywords for literatures published between years 2000 – 2016. Literatures written in English and fully accessible were all included. No exclusion criteria was set before the search. Online authoritative websites pertaining to travel health were also referred. A total of six literatures ranging from expert opinion, review paper and original study, together with three authoritative websites related to travel health were reviewed. Among the important components needed to be considered for developing the guideline for establishing travel health services are to prioritise pre-travel health service, to set up specialised travel health clinic, to produce travel health/medicine specialist, to emphasize on continuous education and training of the practitioners and to apply multiagency and multidisciplinary approach with adequate fund for research in travel health. As a conclusion, policy makers should prioritise and select the most important components in developing guideline for travel health service.
Travel health service
;
travel medicine
;
guideline development
7.General Remarks: For Promoting Travel Medicine in Japan
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2005;54(1):1-10
For a long while after World War II, travel medicine had sunk ro its lowest ebb in Japan. In the late 1980s, with nation's rapid economic development, national income rose rapidly the number of overseas travelers increased explosively, and many industries began to move their production bases to Asian countries. It was in this socioeconomic context that travel medicine came to be recognized again. In so-called developing, infectious diseases which are rarely seen in Japan and those characteristic in the tropical regions are still prevalent. In addition, new types of infectious disease entities occasionally spread very rapidly by travelers and give a shock to the world. Hence the importance of travel medicine increases. However, Japanese people take it for granted that their country or company protects their health. This is probably because of the universal national health insurance system and vaccination programs for preventing infectious diseases. Unlike Europeans and Americans, they hardly realize that one must protect one's health by oneself. In order to promote travel medicine from now on, a nationwide educational campaign which gives information to people on health risks in traveling abroad and that raises their awareness that one's health must be protected by oneself is necessary. The campaign requiers the collaboration of related medical societies, the travel industry and the administration.
Travel
;
Medicine
;
seconds
;
Japan
;
Health
8.Medical Problems during Participation of Medical Congress - A Long Trip to Val D'Isere from Korea.
Darlene PARK ; Minjae KIM ; Ga Young LEE ; Ku Hyun YANG ; Hye Sun PARK ; Dae Chul SUH
Neurointervention 2016;11(1):1-4
Since the 3rd WIN meeting in 1982 more than 500 participants join the meeting in Val D'Isere every year [1]. One of our authors has attended the meeting more than 10 times. He experienced many physical illnesses while travelling from South Korea to Val D'Isere in France, which is located in the Alps mountain near the border between France and Italy. In order to get there, it is necessary to take airplane, train, and/or bus with a heavy suitcase. During the trip which usually takes more than 15 hours, he experienced headache, gastrointestinal trouble, sleep disturbance and other additional physical illnesses. Therefore, we reviewed the itinerary to Val D'Isere and presented physical illnesses which occurred during a long trip for an academic activity by specialized professionals such as university hospital professors. In addition, we discussed the mechanism of such illnesses and offered possible solutions including medical treatment.
Aircraft
;
France
;
Headache
;
Italy
;
Korea*
;
Travel Medicine
10.Japanese Travels of Joseon Medicine and the Aspects of Publication of Collections of Medical Written Conversations.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2010;19(1):137-156
Of the more than two hundred collections of pildamchanghwa scattered around the world that are being catalogued and translated, more than forty are medical in nature. This paper organizes and charts the medical written conversations by their dates of publication and examine the various aspects of their publication. Medical written conversations have been collected since the Fourth Envoy. There are no records of medical written conversations or poetry exchange in Tsushima even though that was the first port of arrival for the Tongsinsa. Instead, sources show that written conversations and poetry exchanges mostly took place in Kyoto, Tokyo, and Osaka; indeed, these three cities, in that order, also have yielded the highest volumes of publication. The first commercially published collection of medical written conversations was Sanghaneuidam, published in 1713 following the Eighth Envoy. Though Gyerimchanghwajip was published two years earlier in 1711, it is clear from the usage of the word changhwa in the title that this collection was not strictly limited to medical written conversations. Sanghaneuidam was an attempt by Japanese medicine to collect questions and answers in order to publish as medical textbooks. The Japanese medicine that was involved in the most written conversations was Kawamura Shunko, who was the editor of Sanghaneuimundap and Joseonpildam following the Tenth Envoy. Publications with titles containing 'eui' explicitly contemplates the targeted readership. Kitao Shunpo was one Japanese medicine who was less interested in meeting a literary scrivener, but instead sought to converse with a respected medicine. When the Eighth Envoy of 1711 arrived in Ogaki, Kitao followed around the Joseon medicines and attempted written conversations. He enlisted the aid of his second son Shunrin in organizing the written conversations, and published the collection, complete with preface, postscript, and appendices-an editorial decision that fully contemplated his audience. Prior to meeting Gi Du-mun, Kitao meticulously planned out the order of questions-that is, the table of contents for Sanghaneuidam. Kitao drafted his questions to serve the purpose of a medical textbook, edited the contents of the written conversations, and added illustrations before presenting the collection to the public. Seomulyuchan, one of the most famous leishu in Japan, contains a preface by Lee Hyeon, a scrivener of Joseon. Kitao, who had studied Dongeuibogam, had already possessed a vast and systematic knowledge of materia medica; however, he sought Lee's contributions, hoping that a preface written by a renowned Joseon scholar would lend his publication more credibility. As such, it can be inferred that the preface to Seomulyuchan was created as an extension of the medical written conversations.
History, 18th Century
;
Humans
;
Japan
;
Medicine, Traditional/history
;
Publishing/history/*statistics & numerical data
;
Travel
;
Writing