International Journal of Travel Medicine and Global Health (May 2018)

Malaria Chemoprophylaxis for Travelers: The Knowledge of Physicians in the State of Qatar, 2017

  • Ahmad Bawazir,
  • Devendra Bansal,
  • Mohamad Chehab,
  • Ayman Al-Dahshan,
  • Mohamed Bala,
  • Hamad Al-Romaihi,
  • Maha Al-Shamali,
  • Mohamed Al-Hajri,
  • Soha Al-Bayat,
  • Mohammed Al-Thani,
  • Elmoubasher Farag

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15171/ijtmgh.2018.13
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 69 – 75

Abstract

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Introduction: Malaria is among the most significant travel-related infections encountered by travelers to endemic countries in terms of morbidity and mortality. In Qatar, imported malaria has increased over the last 5 years; 493 travel-related cases were confirmed in 2016. In the current study, the knowledge of malaria chemoprophylaxis among physicians in the State of Qatar was assessed. Methods: This was a cross-sectional study conducted during a national travel health workshop at the Ministry of Public Health, Qatar. Physicians participating in the workshop from different national healthcare institutions providing travel medicine services were invited to voluntarily complete a self-administered, structured questionnaire. Results: Forty-two medical doctors participated in the study (92 response rate). Based on their specialty, almost two-thirds (64.3%) of the participants were family medicine physicians, and one-fifth (21.43%) were general practitioners. Furthermore, most of the doctors were untrained in travel medicine. The majority of participants demonstrated a good knowledge of the malaria parasite (100%), Plasmodium species (64.3%), incidence (83.3%), transmission (66.7%), and drug-resistance (95.2%) of malaria. Additionally, most physicians (>90) were knowledgeable about the major features of severe or complicated malaria as well as malaria prevention and chemoprophylaxis. Conclusion: This study highlights several areas of good knowledge on travel-related malaria prophylaxis and prevention among the study participants; however, there are still a few knowledge gaps that require mitigation. Continuing training programs on malaria prevention in travelers will sustain this good level of knowledge among physicians and improve the quality of pre-travel advice provided by travel medicine practitioners in Qatar.

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