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IMHO, your suggestions are incredibly uninformed and irresponsible.
For openers, your comment, "If you are going for two weeks take Malaria meds, if you are going for months don't bother with them" makes no apparent sense as the longer you're there the more likely you are to be exposed to an infected mosquito. Am I missing something?
And "...is not as bad as everyone makes out?" Have you asked Lorin Zaret (see my original post) how bad it can be?
The CDC recommends malaria prophylaxis for the Bay Islands (See--http://www2.ncid.cdc.gov/travel/yb/utils/ybGet.asp?section=YBOne&obj=HN&cssNav=browseoyb). Are you overriding their expertise?
According to that same link, yellow fever vaccination is not required. However, the original poster apparently has already been vaccinated and this will do no harm.
As for the comment, "The treatment is Chloroquin and Farmaquin (sp?) anyway, so why take the pills to stop yourself getting it when you can just wait and see if you do, and then take them!," you honestly can't see any reason to prevent a potentially very serious disease just because the drugs used to prevent and treat it maybe the same? Are you aware that once one contracts malaria they can have frequent recurrent episodes for many years despite treatment? This so absurd as to not even dignify a more detailed response.
By "Chloroquin" I suspect you mean "chloroquine (not capitalized as it's a chemical not a brand name)" which is marketed under brand names such as Aralen. I am not familiar with "farmaquin." Could you possibly mean primaquine, a co-drug sometimes used with chloroquine?
Think about what you say, Will. People's health and well-being may be dependent upon it.
Happy holidays.
DocVikingo
For openers, your comment, "If you are going for two weeks take Malaria meds, if you are going for months don't bother with them" makes no apparent sense as the longer you're there the more likely you are to be exposed to an infected mosquito. Am I missing something?
And "...is not as bad as everyone makes out?" Have you asked Lorin Zaret (see my original post) how bad it can be?
The CDC recommends malaria prophylaxis for the Bay Islands (See--http://www2.ncid.cdc.gov/travel/yb/utils/ybGet.asp?section=YBOne&obj=HN&cssNav=browseoyb). Are you overriding their expertise?
According to that same link, yellow fever vaccination is not required. However, the original poster apparently has already been vaccinated and this will do no harm.
As for the comment, "The treatment is Chloroquin and Farmaquin (sp?) anyway, so why take the pills to stop yourself getting it when you can just wait and see if you do, and then take them!," you honestly can't see any reason to prevent a potentially very serious disease just because the drugs used to prevent and treat it maybe the same? Are you aware that once one contracts malaria they can have frequent recurrent episodes for many years despite treatment? This so absurd as to not even dignify a more detailed response.
By "Chloroquin" I suspect you mean "chloroquine (not capitalized as it's a chemical not a brand name)" which is marketed under brand names such as Aralen. I am not familiar with "farmaquin." Could you possibly mean primaquine, a co-drug sometimes used with chloroquine?
Think about what you say, Will. People's health and well-being may be dependent upon it.
Happy holidays.
DocVikingo