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91-Tropical Medicine Update with Jason Jarvis

91-Tropical Medicine Update with Jason Jarvis

FromCoROM cast. Wilderness, Austere, Remote and Resource-limited Medicine.


91-Tropical Medicine Update with Jason Jarvis

FromCoROM cast. Wilderness, Austere, Remote and Resource-limited Medicine.

ratings:
Length:
50 minutes
Released:
May 17, 2024
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

This week, Aebhric O'Kelly talks with Jason Jarvis about the operational importance of helminths.

Takeaways
Tropical medicine focuses on helping people in tropical areas with high rates of parasitic worms and tropical diseases.
Parasitic worms are classified into species, including Annelida, Nematodes, and Platyhelminths.
Worm infestations are more common in developing countries and rural areas.
Diagnosing and treating worm infestations are crucial, especially in remote and austere environments.
Various worms, such as pinworms, filariasis, schistosomiasis, and tapeworms, can cause significant health problems.
Prevention measures, such as avoiding contaminated food and water, are essential in reducing the risk of worm infestations. Ask patients about their travel history and potential exposure to parasitic worms
Different species of trematodes have other risk factors and manifestations
Diseases and non-battle injuries (DNBI) can have a significant impact in military settings
Climate change is contributing to the spread of tropical diseases in new areas
 
Chapters
00:00 Introduction and Background
02:24 Classification of Parasitic Worms
07:53 Prevalence of Worm Infections
24:39 Prevention and Conclusion
34:50 The Importance of Travel History
37:23 The Role of Recent Travel in
Diagnosis
45:57 Diseases and Non-Battle Injuries (DNBI) in Military Settings
49:38 Climate Change and the Spread of
Tropical Diseases
 
Sound Bites
"I enjoy having a microscope and little friends to look at."
"Approximately four billion people in the world are infected with one type of helminth or another."
"Many of these roundworms and helminths cause problems we'll see as medics."
"We've got five species of trematodes,
five different species of schistosomes that are clinically important to us in human medicine."
"When doing a clinical workup, it's important that we ask our patients where they have been?"
"The sample is great and universal, but that R is vastly important for recent travel."
Released:
May 17, 2024
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (94)

The College releases a new podcast each Friday discussing wilderness medicine, austere healthcare and emergency medicine. We have four presenters including an MD PhD cardiologist, COL(ret) anaesthetist burns and pain specialist, a critical care paramedic and an offshore medic.