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Health problems and exposure to infectious risks in returning humanitarian aid workers
by
Jidar, Kaoutar
, Taieb, Fabien
, Lucet, Cora
, Buffet, Pierre
, Van der Pluijm, Rob W
, Itani, Oula
, Benabdelmoumen, Ghania
, Consigny, Paul-Henri
, Hochedez, Patrick
, Kuhmel, Lucie
in
Adult
/ Disease prevention
/ Female
/ Humanitarian aid
/ Humanitarianism
/ Humans
/ Malaria
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Middle Aged
/ Occupational exposure
/ Population studies
/ Questionnaires
/ Rabies
/ Relief Work
/ Respiratory tract infection
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Risk exposure
/ Risk Factors
/ Schistosomiasis
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Travel
/ Tropical diseases
2024
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Health problems and exposure to infectious risks in returning humanitarian aid workers
by
Jidar, Kaoutar
, Taieb, Fabien
, Lucet, Cora
, Buffet, Pierre
, Van der Pluijm, Rob W
, Itani, Oula
, Benabdelmoumen, Ghania
, Consigny, Paul-Henri
, Hochedez, Patrick
, Kuhmel, Lucie
in
Adult
/ Disease prevention
/ Female
/ Humanitarian aid
/ Humanitarianism
/ Humans
/ Malaria
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Middle Aged
/ Occupational exposure
/ Population studies
/ Questionnaires
/ Rabies
/ Relief Work
/ Respiratory tract infection
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Risk exposure
/ Risk Factors
/ Schistosomiasis
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Travel
/ Tropical diseases
2024
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Health problems and exposure to infectious risks in returning humanitarian aid workers
by
Jidar, Kaoutar
, Taieb, Fabien
, Lucet, Cora
, Buffet, Pierre
, Van der Pluijm, Rob W
, Itani, Oula
, Benabdelmoumen, Ghania
, Consigny, Paul-Henri
, Hochedez, Patrick
, Kuhmel, Lucie
in
Adult
/ Disease prevention
/ Female
/ Humanitarian aid
/ Humanitarianism
/ Humans
/ Malaria
/ Male
/ Medical personnel
/ Middle Aged
/ Occupational exposure
/ Population studies
/ Questionnaires
/ Rabies
/ Relief Work
/ Respiratory tract infection
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Risk exposure
/ Risk Factors
/ Schistosomiasis
/ Surveys and Questionnaires
/ Travel
/ Tropical diseases
2024
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Health problems and exposure to infectious risks in returning humanitarian aid workers
Journal Article
Health problems and exposure to infectious risks in returning humanitarian aid workers
2024
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Overview
Abstract
Background
Humanitarian aid workers are exposed to deployment-related health threats. Identifying subgroups at a higher risk of infection in this diverse population could help optimize prevention.
Methods
We carried out a retrospective study based on anonymized data of humanitarian aid workers that visited our clinic for a post-deployment visit between 1 January 2018 and 31 December 2021. We conducted a descriptive analysis of basic demographic data, self-reported risk exposure and health problems encountered during deployment extracted from a standard questionnaire.
Results
The questionnaire was administered to 1238 aid workers during 1529 post-deployment medical consultations. The median age was 37.2 years (IQR 31.7–44.3), and 718/1529 (47.0%) were female aid workers. The median duration of deployment was 6 months (IQR 3–12 months). Most deployments (1321/1529 (86.4%)) were for a medical organization and in Sub-Saharan Africa (73.2%). The most common risk exposures were contact with freshwater in schistosomiasis endemic regions (187/1308 (14.3%)), unprotected sexual contact with a person other than a regular partner (138/1529 (9.0%)), suspected rabies exposure (56/1529 (3.7%)) and accidental exposure to blood (44/1529 (2.9%)). Gastrointestinal problems (487/1529 (31.9%)), malaria (237/1529 (15.5%)) and respiratory tract infections (94/1529 (6,2%)) were the most encountered health problems. Fifteen volunteers (1%) were hospitalized during deployment and 19 (1.2%) repatriated due to health problems. Adherence to malaria chemoprophylaxis was poor, only taken according to the prescription in 355 out of 1225 (29.0%) of aid workers for whom prophylaxis was indicated.
Conclusion
Humanitarian aid workers deployed abroad encounter significant rates of health problems and report a high level of risk exposure during their deployment, with the risks being greatest among younger people, those deployed to rural areas, and those working for non-medical organizations. These findings help guide future pre-deployment consultations, to increase awareness and reduce risk behaviour during deployment, as well as focus on adherence to medical advice such as malaria chemoprophylaxis.
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