Foreign travel associated illness, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. 2007 report
Authors:
Health Protection Agency
Publication date:
August 2007
ISBN:
978-0-901144-90-4
Synopsis
This is the biennial report of data on foreign travel-associated illness for 2004 and 2005 produced by the Travel and Migrant Health Section (TMHS) of the Health Protection Agency, Centre for Infections, a partner in the National Travel Health Network and Centre. The aim of this report is to give an overview of the global epidemiology of various travel-associated infections together with a summary of the burden of travel-associated diseases in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Each chapter links in with relevant sources of information for travellers and their health advisers on pre-travel advice.
Additional information
Travel health
Slide set
Download report in chapters
Foreign travel associated illness, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland 2007 report - Introduction (PDF, 88 KB)
Foreign travel associated illness, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland 2007 report - Travel Trends (PDF, 377 KB)
Foreign travel associated illness, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland 2007 report - Mortality and non-infectious morbidity in travellers (PDF, 394 KB)
Foreign travel associated illness, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland 2007 report - Mortality and non-infectious Food and water-borne diseases (PDF, 1.1 MB)
Foreign travel associated illness, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland 2007 report - Anthropod borne diseases (PDF, 522 KB)
Foreign travel associated illness, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland 2007 report - HIV and other sexually-transmitted infections (PDF, 105 KB)
Foreign travel associated illness, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland 2007 report - Diseases of close association (PDF, 66 KB)
Foreign travel associated illness, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland 2007 report - Other diseases (PDF, 307 KB)
Foreign travel associated illness, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland 2007 report - Appendices (PDF, 59 KB)
Last reviewed: 27 April 2009