[MCOH-EH] Global Travel for GME Trainees
Lanzi, Maria
Maria.Lanzi at va.gov
Thu Nov 1 04:37:28 PDT 2018
I whole-heartedly agree with Tim.
Too often I have seen patients with multiple co-morbidities (our travelers are getting older) who have had a cursory inquiry into their travel plans/health status and are not fully aware of the epidemiological risk for disease or the risk mitigation tools (vaccine, handwashing, education) available to them. If the resident (or corporate employee) is traveling on approved travel, the "house" should recognize that appropriate prevention is often better than the treatment/cure.
Maria
Maria C. Lanzi, MS, MPH, ANP-BC, COHN-S, CTH
Nurse Practitioner/Program Coordinator
Employee Occupational Health
Corporal Michael J Crescenz Veterans Affairs Medical Center
3900Woodland Avenue
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Work: 215 823 5800 x 2592
Fax: 215 823 5968
Confidentiality Note: The information contained in this e-mail is privileged and confidential information under the provisions of 38 USC 5705. It is intended only for the person or persons to which it is addressed, and may be protected from disclosure without proper authorization. Dissemination, distribution, or copying of this e-mail message, or the information herein by anyone other than the intended recipient is prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender by reply e-mail and destroy the original message and all copies.
From: MCOH-EH [mailto:mcoh-eh-bounces at mylist.net] On Behalf Of Timothy Herrick
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2018 8:32 PM
To: MCOH/EH <mcoh-eh at mylist.net>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [MCOH-EH] Global Travel for GME Trainees
this is an interesting question from a variety of perspectives; as med. director of Occ health, I don't think our institution is handling this well; if the resident is going on an approved educational experience, it seems like in ways, the "house" should provide for their pre-care. as it is, at our institution, travelers are referred to an on-site but uncovered [because our employee insurance specifically excludes travel] travel clinic. ironically, this is also me. this is something we may need to review. I would encourage an occ health department to be aware that prescription for travel is not necessarily a very simple activity, and one that requires access to the patients full medical and drug history, [in addition to the ever-changing risk patterns for different diseases around the world, which medical travelers will directly engage in, it's not a simple question of looking at a website, and some of the required or recommended vaccines may be incredibly expensive to have on hand] so again, it is not an easy issue to think through
Tim Herrick
________________________________
From: MCOH-EH [mcoh-eh-bounces at mylist.net] on behalf of LeClair-Netzel Megan E [MLeClair-Netzel at uwhealth.org]
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2018 1:34 PM
To: mcoh-eh at mylist.net<mailto:mcoh-eh at mylist.net>
Subject: [MCOH-EH] Global Travel for GME Trainees
Hello,
Do any academic medical center EH/OH programs service Graduate Medical Trainees before/after they travel internationally?
If so, what services do you offer before/after?
Thanks,
Megan
Megan LeClair-Netzel, DNP, RN, AGCNS-BC
Manager of Employee Health Services
UW Health
600 Highland Ave MC: 6715
Madison, WI 53792
Office: (608) 422-8055
Pager: 8097
Your Health, Your Goals. Discover Wellness Options at Work<https://mail.ohsu.edu/owa/UrlBlockedError.aspx>.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://mylist.net/archives/mcoh-eh/attachments/20181101/e96b5256/attachment.html>
More information about the MCOH-EH
mailing list