1 / 15

Travel Medicine I n Alberta: Can Public Health D o more?

Travel Medicine I n Alberta: Can Public Health D o more?. Silvina Mema 1 , Judy MacDonald 2 , Rudy Zimmer 3 , David Strong 2 , Lynn McIntyre 4 1 Public Health and Preventive Medicine, University of Calgary 2 Medical Officer of Health, Alberta Health services, Calgary Zone

kalea
Download Presentation

Travel Medicine I n Alberta: Can Public Health D o more?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Travel Medicine In Alberta: Can Public Health Do more? Silvina Mema1, Judy MacDonald2, Rudy Zimmer3, David Strong2, Lynn McIntyre4 1 Public Health and Preventive Medicine, University of Calgary 2 Medical Officer of Health, Alberta Health services, Calgary Zone 3 Travel Health Services Consultant, Alberta Health Services 4 Professor, Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary

  2. Travel Health & International Travel • Travel Health is concerned with*: • Prevention of infectious diseases and environmental risks • Personal safety and responsible travel • Early identification and careof post-travel illness • Travel Risks: • Preventable, avoidable, manageable, unexpected • International Travellers: • Tourists, volunteers, immigrants visiting friends and relatives (VFRs) *Definition from Travel Health Capacity Building Working Group 2013, PHAC

  3. The Sick Returned Traveller Costs money Affects others back home Sexually Transmitted Diseases, measles, & other diseases Outbreaks • Exotic diseases, misdiagnosed • Multiple visits to doctors/ER • Hospitalization/labs/ treatment • Indirect costs: missed work, suffering, pain...

  4. Travel Health in Alberta: Not Publicly Funded Alberta Health Services Private Providers • Urban and rural • Operate at full capacity • Publicly funded vaccines • Nurses (overseen by physician) • Provincial algorithm • Access to medical records • See 35-45% of all clients • Urban • Compete price/customization • Physicians, nurses, pharmacists • Varying standards • Charge fees • No standards

  5. Review of Travel Health Program Purpose: • Define the role of public health • Identify challenges and opportunities • Develop a vision for a new and improved travel health program Outcome

  6. International Travel, Alberta 2003-2013 Source: Statistics Canada

  7. Hepatitis A, Malaria & Typhoid 2003-2012 Source, Alberta Health Services

  8. Traveller’s Profiles: Edmonton Travel Clinic Survey, 2013 • VFRs=Visiting Friends and Relatives: • Immigrants who return to their country of birth to visit • Less likely to seek a pre-travel consultation • Barriers include: Cost, risk perception, lack of awarenes, cultural factors

  9. Travel Program Challenges & Opportunities • Capacity • AHS clinics at full capacity • Opportunity to see more clients, generate revenue • Equitable access to travel health • High risk groups not actively targeted • Opportunity to improve equity • Standards • Varying across Alberta • Opportunity to create uniform service across province/providers

  10. Strategy Formulation • Target group: • Population • High risk Strategy Formulation • Service Provided: • Advice based ($) • Client centered ($$)

  11. Strategy Formulation

  12. Strategy Formulation Business opportunity Opportunity to remove barriers

  13. Travel Medicine In Alberta:Can Public Health Do More? • Recognize the growing demand for travel health • Acknowledge burden on high risk groups (VFRs) • Consider a client centered strategy: • Generate revenue • Save healthcare costs by preventing disease • Engage private providers: • Build capacity in addressing the demand • Ensure uniform service delivery through provincial standards

  14. Thank you! Acknowledgements: • Katie Meleta, Public Health Officer at Public Health Agency of Canada • Dr. Raymond Tellier, ProvLab, Alberta • Dr. Kevin Fonseca, ProvLab, Alberta • Dr. Olga Petricevic, Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary

  15. Resources • Alberta Health Services. Travel Health Services. • Alberta Health-Notifiable disease guidelines and related documents. Hepatits A. 2013 • Bui, Yen‐Giang, et al. "Cases of malaria, hepatitis A, and typhoid fever among VFRs, Quebec (Canada)." Journal of travel medicine 18.6 (2011): 373-378. • CDC Yellow Book. Chapter#8. Advising clients with special needs. • Collis, D. J., & Rukstad, M. G. (2008). Can you say what your strategy is?. harvard business review, 86(4), 82-90. • Encouraging travellers to take preventive measures against travel related communicable diseases: a rapid review of the literature. Region of Peel, 2013 • Enteric Transmission Risk Assessment. Notifiable disease guidelines and related documents, Alberta Health • Lee CS, Gregson DB, Church D, Laupland KB, Eckhardt R, Ross T, et al. Population-based laboratory surveillance of imported malaria in metropolitan calgary, 2000-2011. PLoS One 2013 Apr 15;8(4):e60751 • Leggat PA, Franklin R. Risk perception and travelers. J Travel Med 2013 Jan-Feb;20(1):1-2. • Rota, P. A., Brown, K., Mankertz, A., Santibanez, S., Shulga, S., Muller, C. P., ... & Featherstone, D. (2011). Global distribution of measles genotypes and measles molecular epidemiology. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 204(suppl 1), S514-S523. • Statistics Canada • Travel Health Capacity Building Working Group http://www.wrha.mb.ca/community/travel/files/Conference13-Presentation-09.pdf • Zimmer, Rudy. "The Pre‐travel Visit Should Start With a “Risk Conversation”." Journal of travel medicine 19, no. 5 (2012): 277-280.

More Related