Travel in the Time of COVID: A Review of International Travel Health in a Global Pandemic

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 24 Số 10 - Trang 129-145 - 2022
Flaherty, Gerard T.1,2, Hamer, Davidson H.3,4,5,6, Chen, Lin H.7,8
1School of Medicine, University of Galway, Galway, Ireland
2School of Medicine, International Medical University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
3Department of Global Health, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, USA
4Section of Infectious Diseases, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, USA
5Center for Emerging Infectious Disease Research and Policy, Boston University, Boston, USA
6National Emerging Infectious Disease Laboratory, Boston University, Boston, USA
7Division of Infectious Diseases and Travel Medicine, Mount Auburn Hospital, Cambridge, USA
8Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA;

Tóm tắt

This review critically considers the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on global travel and the practice of travel medicine, highlights key innovations that have facilitated the resumption of travel, and anticipates how travel medicine providers should prepare for the future of international travel. Since asymptomatic transmission of the virus was first recognized in March 2020, extensive efforts have been made to characterize the pattern and dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 transmission aboard commercial aircraft, cruise ships, rail and bus transport, and in mass gatherings and quarantine facilities. Despite the negative impact of further waves of COVID-19 driven by the more transmissible Omicron variant, rapid increases of international tourist arrivals are occurring and modeling anticipates further growth. Mitigation of spread requires an integrated approach that combines masking, physical distancing, improving ventilation, testing, and quarantine. Vaccines and therapeutics have played a significant role in reopening society and accelerating the resumption of travel and further therapeutic innovation is likely. COVID-19 is likely to persist as an endemic infection, and surveillance will assume an even more important role. The pandemic has provided an impetus to advance technology for telemedicine, to adopt mobile devices and GPS in contact tracing, and to apply digital applications in research. The future of travel medicine should continue to harness these novel platforms in the clinical, research, and educational arenas.