Title: International Health H.O.
1International Health H.O.
Rosalind Franklin University School of
Medicine Med II Preventive Medicine Tues, 12 Apr
05, 1000-1100
- Lecture by
- Jesse Monestersky,DO,MS,MPH,DTMH
- CAPT,MC,USNR(FS,HMO)
- Contact info
- (W) 847-688-6712x5081
- Email jesse.monestersky_at_nhgl.med.navy.mil
2Enabling Objectives
- To understand causes magnitude of CHEs
- To know 6 major causes of infectious disease
death worldwide - To understand difference between emerging
reemerging diseases, surveillance, risk factors - To become acquainted with sources for IH
rotations - To become familiar with travel medicine focus
- To become aware of sobering realities the good,
the bad, the ugly - To become familiar with key TM diseases
3ROE
- Potpourri of topics
- Fire hose approach
- Keep your seatbelts fastened
- Happy to serve as a future resource
- Maybe will even excite one of you to pursue
career in IH - There will be a few questions on your exam from
this lecture
4References
- Textbooks
- Auerbach, PS Wilderness Medicine Management of
Wilderness Environmental Emergencies, CV Mosby,
2001 - Cook, GC AI Zumla PEC Manson-Bahr DR Bell -
Mansons Tropical Diseases, 21st Ed., WB
Saunders, 2002 - Jong, EC R McMullen The Travel Tropical
Medicine Handbook, WB Saunders, 2002 - Magil, AJ Hunters Tropical Medicine Emerging
Diseases, WB Saunders Co., 2000 - Steffen Dupont Wilder-Smith Manual of Travel
Medicine Health, 2nd Ed., BC Decker, UK, 2003 - Zuckerman, JN Principles Practice of Travel
Medicine, John Wiley Sons Publisher, 2001 - Societies
- American College of Tropical Medicine
- American Society of Tropical Medicine Hygiene
- International Society of Travel Medicine
- Royal Society of Tropical Medicine Hygiene (UK)
- Educational credentials
- MPH (Master of Public Health) (Schools of Public
Health, PrevMed Departments in Medical Schools) - CTH (Certificate of Travel Medicine)
- DTMH (Diploma in Tropical Medicine Hygiene)
(LSTM, London SH)
5Bottom Line, Up Front
- International Health
- To provide background, educational opportunities
your potential role - Try to do a medical rotation overseas, esp.,
developing country - Gain experience in nutrition esp., peds,
malnutrition marasmus (calorie) vs. kwashikor
(protein), environmental health (food water
sanitation), entomology (medical), infect dx
(measles, TB, malaria), diarrhea (ORS) - Think about MPH degree or dual MD/MPH (IH, Epi,
MCH) - Consider eventual paid or volunteer work abroad
e.g., PC (volunteer, PCMO), USDOS (RMO), DoD
(A/D), NGO (MSF) - Become more familiar with CHE, Mass disasters,
Refugee Medicine - International medical perspective mind-broadening
- You can make a difference (even one person at a
time) - Even consider specialty you choose if you want
overseas work (e.g., IM/ID/TM, Ortho, GenSurg,
ENT, Ophthal) - Requires change in frame of reference to gain
from experience! - Carefully preplan your trip to make it meaningful
safe - Learn a language or improve your language skills
6Relevance???
- Are tropical diseases of just historical
interest? - Emerging reemerging diseases
- Global warming is changing disease distribution
(e.g., WNF, malaria) - With international jet travel, patients can show
up anywhere even at a Midwest doc-in-the-box! - Future pandemics (e.g., Avian influenza)?
- Bioterrorism (e.g., smallpox, anthrax)
- Many diseases remain major killers world-wide
(measles, diarrhea, malaria, TB) - Developing countries a Petri dish for rest of
world
7Monkeypox
- Ref CDC MMWR 52(23)537-540 6/13/03
Multi-state Outbreak of Monkeypox IL, IN, WI - The 1st case presented to Marshfield Clinic WI
for Tx of an infected bite from a pet prairie dog
(6/03). - Marshfield thought it was an orthopox by EM
specimen sent to CDC lab, which confirmed Dx by
PCR. - This orthopoxvirus is similar in appearance to
smallpox with low CFR. - Human monkeypox was 1st identified in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo in a a region
where smallpox had been eradicated in 1968. - 53 cases resulting in 14 hospitalizations (26).
- SS Preceding febrile illness, papular rash,
lymphadenopathy, sore throat. Rash progressed
through states of vesiculation, pustulation,
umbilication, encrustation. Rashes occurred on
hands, trunk, extremities many patients had
initial satellite lesions on palms, soles,
extremities. Rashes were generalized in some pts. - Epid All pts had contact with animals (Cynomys
sp.) 1 pt reported contact with a Gambian giant
rat (Cricetomys sp.). Investigation revealed
that a common distributor was responsible, who
housed prairie dogs and Gambian giant rats
together. Records revealed that the Gambian
giant rats were shipped from Ghana to Texas and
then, on to Illinois. Exposures were at a pet
swap meet in N. WI. - FDA CDC issued an immediate ban on importation
of all rodents from Africa (order Rodentia)
8Malaria
- Airport malaria in France
- Between 1969-98, 63 cases of airport malaria have
been reported in W. Europe, 24 of which occurred
in France. - Most cases due to Plasmodium falciparum.
- In 1994, 7 cases occurred in around Roissy
Charles de Gaulle airport (CDG), showing 4 types
of exposure employees working on airstrips or
opening containers, among residents living near
airport, among people living at some distance
from airport after a secondary transport of
vectors, by vectors transported in luggage. - Prevention is by disinsectization of aircraft,
with permethrin aerosol though there is some
pyrethroid resistance in Anopheles gambiae in W.
Africa. - Ref Guillet, P MC Germain, T Giacomini, F
Chandre, M Akogbeto, O Faye, A Kone, L Manga L, J
Mouchet Origin Prevention of Airport Malaria
in France. Trop Med Int Health 3(9)700-5 Sep
1998
9I. Complex Humanitarian Emergencies
10Definition of CHE
- Def Human disaster that occurs during follows
war civil strife - Inciting event either natural or man-made
- Characterized by displacement (internal,
external) - Loss of existing societal infrastructure
- Concerns for personal security
- 90 of war related mortality is among civilian
non-combatants
11Refugees vs. IDPs
- Flight across border (R) or within border (IDP)
- 14M refugees
- 15 20M IDPs
- UN international protections vary
- Difficulty in assistance (e.g., Tsunami in Sri
Lanka)
12Priority Needs
- Sanitary food
- Sanitary water
- Sanitary waste disposal
- Shelter (planned layout of camp)
- Identification of vulnerable populations
- Appropriate health interventions for these
populations - Immunizations
- Nutritional assessment
- Food appropriate to population
- Security
- Communications
- Transportation distribution scheme
- Internal help (military, govt, healthcare
workers) - Outside help
- UNHCR
- ICRC
- NGO (e.g., Medecins sans Frontieres)
- Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
- USAID (Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance)
13Government-Civilian Agency Cooperation in Crisis
Management
- Civil-Military Cooperation
- C4 (command, control, communications,
coordination) security logistical
capabilities (resources, transportation) - DoD vs. coalition partners (e.g., NATO)
- HA, MOOTW aid agencies
- Sometimes friction
- Emergencies disasters (e.g., hurricane
response) - USDOS-Civilian Cooperation
- USAID, NGOs (local experts), Embassy,
Beneficiary partnership - Uni/bi/multi-national, UN
14II. Major Disease Killers Worldwide
15Leading Infectious Causesof Death 2002
- Acute RI 3.8M
- HIV/AIDS 2.8M
- Diarrheal dxs 1.8M
- TB 1.6M
- Malaria 1.2M
- Measles 0.8M
- Ref WHO, World Health Report, 2003
16III. Emerging vs. Reemerging Diseases
17Emerging Diseases
- Newly identified disease
- Increased incidence over past 2 decades
- Incidence expected to increase over next 2
decades - Examples
- WNF
- Avian influenza
- SARS
- CDC Emerging Infectious Diseases
(http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/index.htm)
18Reemerging Diseases
19Ingredients for Emergence
- Pathogen adaptation change
- Virulence
- Adherence
- Invasiveness
- Toxin production
- Evasion of host immune defenses
- Antibiotic Resistance
- Expansion to new environments, reservoirs,
vectors (microbial traffic) - Increased populations at risk
- Genetic predisposition
- Co-infection
- Urban migration poverty
- Crowding poor hygiene
- Impaired immunity
- Inadequate public health infrastructure
20Combating Emerging Reemerging Diseases
- Facilitate early recognition control of new
diseases - Tracking by US Overseas Labs
- Train host-nation epidemiologists
- Assess control threats
- US CDC (e.g., MMWR), USAMRIID (US Army Medical
Research Institute for Infectious Dxs , GEIS
(Global Emerging Infections Surveillance
program), ESSENCE (Electronic Surveillance
System for the Early Notification of
Community-Based Epidemics) - Network with foreign health agencies WHO
(Outbreak Reports), ISID (Promed) - Monitor drug resistant organisms e.g.,
Plasmodia, enteric other pathogens (VRE, MRSA) - Monitor for leptospirosis, yellow fever, dengue,
hantaviruses
21Powder Kegs for the Next Great Pandemic
- In the Shadow of the City
- Worlds great slums
- Cairo, Smokey Mountain (Manila), Rio, Calcutta,
Mexico City - Worlds slums are growing rapidly (UN-HABITAT
Human Settlements Program Report) - Now at 1B mark, making up 32 of global urban
population - Figure will double to 2B in next 30yr unless
concerted effort undertaken - In developing countries slum dwellers account for
43 of population in contrast to about 6 in more
developed countries - Slums represent worst of urban poverty
inequality - No sanitation, no education, uncounted census
- Worlds rural population has reached its peak
almost all further population growth will be
absorbed by urban settlements
22Smokey Mountain Manila
23Recommended Movies!
- City of Joy (1992)
- Beyond Rangoon (1995)
244. International Health Rotation
25International Health Rotations
- Learn about advanced disease, in austere
settings! - New skill set
- Public health in action
- Get to see much do much
- May become impetus for career in international
health, public health - Will change you forever
26Some International MedicalVolunteer Organizations
- International Medical Volunteers Association
(http//www.imva.org) - International Medical Corps (http//www.imcworldwi
de.org/index.shtml) - Health Volunteers Overseas (http//www.hvousa.org)
- Doctors Without Borders (http//www.doctorswithout
borders.org) - MEDICO (http//www.medico.org)
- Medicine For Peace (http//www.medpeace.org)
27How Where
- International Health Central American Institute
Foundation (http//www.ihcai.org/programs.htm) - Global Medicine (http//www.globalmedicine.org/GMN
/student.html) - AMA International Electives (http//www.ama-assn.o
rg/ama/pub/category/12557.html) - Office of Global Health (http//www.health.ufl.edu
/ogh/oghpages/externships.html) - American Academy of Family Physicians
(http//www.aafp.org/ihcop/electives.html) - The Center for International Health
(http//intlhealth.med.utoronto.ca/Links/linksjob.
html)
285. Travel Medicine(Emporiatrics)
29Travel Medicine
- Travel Medicine Clinics (govt, private)
- Medical concerns of departing returning
traveler (business traveler, tourist) - Critical is current medical intelligence
- CDC, USDOS, WHO, I-SOS, Military (AFMIC)
- Most important aspects
- Preplanning (do not leave for last minute)
- Immunizations chemoprophylaxis
- Mosquito avoidance repellents (DEET, pyrethrum),
netting, clothing, habits - Sanitary food water
- Medical repatriation insurance (e.g., I-SOS)
- Major causes of death (MVA, AMI)
- Carry medical current medical summary
- Bring sufficient supply of Rx
- Documents (yellow shot record, passport)
306. Tropical Diseases
31Tropical Diseases
- Diseases to eventually come to know love
- Malaria, dengue, hemorrhagic fevers (Ebola,
Hanta, Lassa, YF, CCHF), leishmaniasis, HIV,
trypanosomiasis, worms nematodes (roundworms),
cestodes (tapeworms), trematodes (flukes),
typhoid, hepatitis, vaccine-preventable dx,
diarrhea, trichinosis, dracunculiasis,
filariasis, schistosomiasis, trop derm,
envenomization (insect, marine, snake), rabies,
tetanus, strongyloides, pneumonias, trop mycoses,
leprosy, prion dxs (Kuru), med entomology
(mosquitoes, phlebotamine sandflies, blackflies,
triatomine bugs ). - Drugs
- Antimalarials, anti-TB, antihelminthics
32Clinical CasesWhat is this stuff?
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337. Some sobering realities
34Downside Realities
- Pick your location carefully, both regarding
endemic diseases, civil stability unrest - Be sure to have medical repatriation insurance
- Check in with AmEmb consular section
- Let folks know where you are
- Dont be a flagrant (ugly) American
- Being a diplomat, aid work, or health
professional not automatic immunity from bad
things happening
35Afghanistan Entire 5-person MSF team
assassinated (2 Jun 04)
36Tsunami
- Following 9.0 magnitude earthquake off coast of
Sumatra, massive tsunami hit Sri Lanka on
12/26/04, killing gt30,000, with gt4300 still
missing. Relief efforts in Sri Lanka hampered in
north east by Tamil Tiger Rebels. - gt150,000 killed across Indian Ocean region, with
hardest hit, Thailand, Indonesia, Sri Lanka.
37Current Hotspot
- Sudan Sudan-Chad (Darfur border Chad (Darfur
border region) - Now 2M at risk
- Looming Humanitarian disaster
- Sudanese fleeing across border into Chad
38Upbeat Realities
39My Range of Experiences
- Embassies
- Military exercises
- Club Med
- Travel Medicine Clinics
- Civilian military training programs
40Wide Range of Experiences Are Awaiting You!
- As a medical student
- International health rotations
- As a medical practitioner
- Refugee camps
- Medical missionary hospitals
- International medical volunteer work
418. Role of the International Community in
Todays World
42Missions of the haves (inc., UN, WB)
- Why done? Regional stability security
- Processes
- Conflict stage
- Peace making/keeping/building
- Provision of food, supplies
- Post-conflict
- Nation building, reconstruction
- Economic development, debt relief
- If help, success stories Kosovo, Bosnia
- If dont help, tragedies Rwanda (1994) with 1M
dead
43Concluding Remarks
- Just do it - Go overseas!
- Join the ranks of public health oriented
physicians! - Study TropMed
- Consider exotic diseases in your D/D
- Enjoy your undergraduate medical school
experience - Good luck in your careers
44Discussion Questions