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Staying Healthy on the Road Medical info, e.g. malaria, vaccinations, travel medical tips, medical insurance, where to find a doctor.
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  #1  
Old 25 May 2009
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Antimalaria

What malaria medication should I take and should I? I have been back and forward to my GP and he recommendes me to take Malaria tablets for pakistan and Nepal .

The one I am thinking of taking is Malarone as it has less side effects .

My question is do I really need Malaria tablets for pakistan and Nepal ???
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  #2  
Old 25 May 2009
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Malaria Hotspots map - Malaria Hotspots

Have a look at the map. Having had malaria I would say yes. Side effects, none I have noticed.
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Old 25 May 2009
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Having also had malaria but taken Lariam since it was first launched on the market I wouldn't necessarily go for Malarone because 'it has less side effects'. Talk to a doctor who knows their stuff, Lariam might suit you, take a 'tester' pill a few weeks before you leave and see if it affected you in any way.

Personally can't take Malarone, took it with me once & had a rare side-effect, hair loss, as a female - I wasn't prepared to put up with it!

Kira
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Old 26 May 2009
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not nice but..

Less side effects is as good a reason as any. The problem with Malarone is the cost and the fact that UK doctors don't prescribe more that 1months worth. The lack of 'psychological' side effects with malarone is comforting too - no seeing things or crazy dreams!
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Old 26 May 2009
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I don't suffer with any Lariam side effects, same as a few of my friends ... hence it should be tried if you're cautious!

Kira
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Old 26 May 2009
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I,m going to be around that region too, but for some reason my doctor has recomend chloroquinine tablets l though theses were pretty much useless theses days??
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  #7  
Old 28 May 2009
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Malarone

I decide to go with malarone due the fact that you only need to take it two days before entering and 7 days after leaving a malaria area.

Its not cheap but worth it. I am mainly taking them for pakistan and a couple of days wile riding in the risk areas of Nepal below 2500m.

Nothing for India or south east asia. So I should be fine.
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Old 29 May 2009
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I don't understand this "nothing." India's got lots of malaria, and southeast Asia's got some of the worst. Are you really taking antimalarials in Nepal but not India?

Mark
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Old 29 May 2009
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I'm with Mark, I'd be suprised about Nepal but further south there's malaria abound!

Ignore it at your peril!

Kira
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Old 29 May 2009
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malaria

Important thread this, I was recomended Malarone for travelling through different malaria zones when you are only a day or a week in an infected are, such as Syria/Turkey, Pakistan and west coast India. You can wait til you are ill, and take a crash course, four tablets a day for three days. Obviously there are going to be 'side effects', but for me this is preferable to taking a daily dose in areas where there is no risk in order to travel onward. Prevention is better than all the pills, but should shit happen Malarone is the so far best option.
I would be very sceptical buying drugs off the internet, Malarone is expensive, but would it be a very bad deal if the pills you bought for half price didn't work when you needed them.
Have to add I have no personal experience with Malarone or malaria.
Peter, in Oslo
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Old 5 Aug 2009
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Because of some mental instability in my family's medical history, Depression etc.
I've used Malarone because of those reduced mental side effects.


Also mosquito netting or a treated tent are very useful.

Last edited by Cruise; 22 Apr 2011 at 21:49. Reason: I provided incorrect information.
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Old 5 Aug 2009
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TT-Kira View Post
I'm with Mark, I'd be suprised about Nepal but further south there's malaria abound!

Ignore it at your peril!

Kira
The jungle in Nepal's southern tier, the Terai, was famously malarial to the point where it was never settled by colonizers or local people except for certain tribes who were (so I've read) somewhat naturally immune. The widespread use of DDT delivered aerially brought about drastic decreases in anopheles mosquitoes, which allowed the intensive settlement, cultivation and resource extraction characteristic of the past 30 or 40 years. I talked to a guy who claimed to remember the planes swooping overhead trailing clouds of insecticides, although he might just have been telling stories to entertain the foolish white man with all the money.

Malaria is on the upswing throughout the Terai as well as in India, where it was almost beaten not so long ago. Last time I was in India there was an outbreak of cerebral malaria which (reportedly) killed thousands of people. This was not widely reported outside India because it happened at the same time that there was an outbreak elsewhere in India of plague, which makes better press and tv.

(/pedantic lecture)

I've had repeated experience with chloroquine, primaquine, mefloquine, doxycycline and Malarone. I tolerate all of them without any trouble, although the whole tetracycline family causes me to sunburn easily. I've also had repeated experience with acute malaria (2x), which I do not recommend. I very much prefer the side effects and/or expense.

Hope that helps.

Mark
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Old 6 Aug 2009
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Malaria gets transmitted mainly at night. Dengue during daytime. I've just come out of SE-Asia, where I travelled between December & June. I didn't take any anti-malarials, although I had them with me: Doxycycline and Proguanil/Chloroquine.

A lot of areas didn't have too many mozzies anyway (dry season). My strategy for areas with too many mozzies: As soon as dawn kicks in, put some DEET repellant on. If it's only for 1-2 hours in the evening, 10% DEET did they job. For a long night out, I'd put the tropical (100% DEET) stuff on.

In the guesthouse: moskito nets (I had my own with me).
Thenly areas where 'malaria' and 'dengue' were a real topic for the locals during the dry season: Indonesia (Lombok, Sumbawa, Flores) and East Timor.
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