Taking Care of Your Health For Safe Travelling





Taking Care of Your Health For Safe Travelling

Taking Care of Your Health For Safe Travelling

Are you going to Paris? Trekking in Nepal? Cruising the Caribbean? Yes, you want to go and to spend some time enjoying the wonderful weather, view and just have a rest from everyday routine.

Whether you tramp through the rain forest or bask on a love boat--travel presents new and different health concerns mostly unknown at home.

We do not want to set on you with our lectures just, please, keep in mind some facts - that will be useful for you. Preparing before you go is the best way to stay healthy while you're traveling. See a doctor at least 6 weeks before you leave so that you'll have time for immunizations that may need to be done in advance. Check with your doctor to see if there are medications or extra precautions that you should take. For example, people who have heart failure may need to take shorter flights with more stops to avoid long periods of sitting or they may need to adjust their medications.

Before you go, research local sanitation and other conditions so that you can take appropriate measures while you are traveling: - Is the water safe to drink? - Do insects, such as mosquitoes or ticks, carry disease? - Is there air pollution? - Will the altitude make you sick? - Is it safe to swim in pools, lakes, or the ocean? - Could you get heat exhaustion, sun stroke, or a sunburn?

Basic precautions, such as drinking bottled water or using insect repellent, can prevent some illnesses, ranging from an inconvenient bout of diarrhea to life-threatening malaria.

Preparing for a journey takes planning and time. Proper planning is the best way to stay healthy during your trip. See a doctor at least 6 weeks before you go so that you'll have time for immunizations and other health precautions you may need to take in advance. There are several factors to consider in preparing for a trip.

Enjoy your trip.

For more information on travel health, please visit Travelling and Health Care

About the author:

Dr. Elizabeth Robinson works in the health care industry for more than a half of the life. Now she shares her experience, publishing the articles on a new health site

Other Related Articles

FOUR MOUNTAINS, INC. ANNOUNCES HEALTH NEWS BREAKTHROUGH ILLNESS BANISHED BY CRACKING THE WHOLISTIC CODE
Contact: Stacey Kumagai 818.506.8675 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FOUR MOUNTAINS, INC. ANNOUNCES HEALTH NEWS BREAKTHROUGH ILLNESS BANISHED BY CRACKING THE WHOLISTIC CODE Calabasas, CA --- Stress. Aging. Illness. Life would be perfect without it. Many doctors, health gurus and even authors have...

Public Health Agency of Canada recommendations for Avian Flu
At least one Canadian group formed after SARS hit Toronto is working with the World Health Organization (WHO), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDCP) and other organizations to help boost public safety. That group is the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), which was formed in...

Health inactivity is the exercise equivalent of smoking
Think of inactivity as the exercise equivalent of smoking, only worse. One study published last year in The New England Journal of Medicine found that being sedentary and out of shape may be more hazardous than other well-known risk factors, such as smoking, hypertension, and heart disease. ...