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Immunizations When
Traveling to Egypt
At present, Egypt does not require travelers arriving from the USA,
Canada and most European countries to have any immunizations. Only two inoculations may be required of other travelers for entry to Egypt under certain
circumstances, yellow fever and cholera. But there are several
immunizations that health authorities recommend to travelers crossing national borders. The following information includes data from the
Centers for Disease Control Fax Information Service for International Travel. You can obtain more
information by calling the CDC at 404-3320-4565 and following the prompts.
Required Immunizations
Yellow Fever. Currently a yellow fever vaccination is the only immunization Egypt officially requires of
arriving travelers, but this is required only of travelers arriving from infected areas of tropical Africa and
Latin America. People planning to travel in sub-Saharan Africa should have a yellow fever vaccination as
this is also officially required by most of these countries, but no one coming to Egypt directly from North
America or Europe who is not planning to visit sub-Saharan Africa will need this.
Cholera. Egypt has not required travelers from North America to have a cholera inoculation for many
years. Cholera occurs only among populations living in extremely unsanitary conditions during the hottest
summer months, conditions travelers coming directly from North America are not exposed to. Also, the
World Health Organization holds that because a cholera vaccination cannot prevent the introduction of the
infection into a country, it should not be officially required of any traveler. However, travelers coming from
an infected area in South America, the Middle East or sub-Saharan Africa should ask their airline whether
there is a government health advisory in effect regarding a cholera inoculation requirement for entry to
Egypt.
Recommended Immunizations
Although most travelers will not need any "required" inoculations, there are some immunizations that are highly
recommended by public health authorities. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) advises, "For
travelers over 2 years of age the following immunizations normally given during childhood should be up to
date: measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine; diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTP or DTaP)
vaccine until age 7, then Td vaccine; polio (OPV) vaccine; haemophilus influenza B (HbCV) vaccine; and
hepatitis B (HBV) vaccine. Children over 2 should be "on schedule" with each vaccine's primary-series
schedule, while adults should have completed the primary series." Adults unsure of their vaccine history
should consult their physicians.
Tetanus/diphtheria booster. Health authorities recommend administration of a tetanus-diphtheria toxoid
(adult type, or Td) booster every 10 years.
Poliomyelitis booster. The CDC advises that unvaccinated or partially vaccinated travelers should
complete a primary series of polio vaccine that is appropriate to their age and previous immunization status.
Adult travelers to developing countries who have had a primary series should receive an additional single
dose of polio vaccine. "This additional dose of polio vaccine should be received only once during the adult
years. Enhanced Inactivated Polio Vaccine (eIPV) is recommended for this dose."
Typhoid fever - primary or booster depending on one's previous immunization status. A new
single-injection vaccination, called Typhim Vi, is available and is approved for children as young as 2 years.
There is also an oral vaccine for typhoid. Consult your physician about the vaccine most appropriate for
you. Health authorities advise that individuals subject to increased risk, such as residents of developing
countries, should have a typhoid booster every three years.
Hepatitis B is contracted through direct contact with blood, or secretions, or intimate sexual contact with
infected persons. Hepatitis B vaccine is recommended now as part of the childhood vaccination program in
the U.S. In Egypt, there is a campaign every year to encourage adults and children to be vaccinated, and
the vaccine is available there. Primary vaccination against hepatitis B consists of 3 doses: the second
administered 1 month after the first, and the third administered 5 months later.
Rabies. Few cases of rabies are reported, perhaps because most people avoid
touching stray animals. There is a pre-exposure rabies vaccine series which the CDC recommends for
persons living in or visiting (for more than 30 days) countries where rabies is common. The United States
Naval Medical Research Unit in Cairo, NAMRU-3, also recommends that American residents in Cairo
have the pre-exposure series because the post-exposure vaccine is not always available there. The
pre-exposure rabies vaccine is administered in three doses over 21 days (day 0, 7, and 21), and must be
completed 30 days or more before departure for Egypt. A person who has had this series who later is
exposed to rabies must still undergo post-exposure immunization therapy, but such therapy is milder than
the treatment that must be given to someone who has not had the pre-exposure series.
Viral hepatitis A, spread in contaminated food and water, is also common in Egypt. There is a new
vaccine, HAVRIX, available in the U.S. for viral hepatitis A, but as yet it is not available in Egypt from
official sources. The CDC recommends hepatitis A vaccine or immunoglobulin for protection against
Hepatitis A. For persons over 18 years of age, hepatitis A vaccine is given in a two-dose series 6 to 12
months apart. For children and adolescents (2 to 18 years), a three-dose series of hepatitis A vaccine is
recommended; the second dose is given one month after the first, and the third dose 6 to 12 months after
the first dose. Immuno-globulin (gamma globulin), which is available in Egypt, is recommended for children
less than two years of age, and for persons of all ages who desire only short term protection every 6
months (or 3 months for someone directly exposed to someone with hepatitis A).
Yellow Fever Endemic Countries
| Countries in Africa |
Countries in South America |
Angola
Benin
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cameroon
Central African Republic
Chad
Congo
Cote d'Ivoire
Djibouti
Equatorial Guinea
Ethiopia |
Gabon
Gambia
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Kenya
Liberia
Mali
Mauritania
Niger
Nigeria |
Rwanda
Sao Tome & Principe
Senegal
Sierra Leone
Somalia
Sudan
Tanzania
Togo
Uganda
Zaire
Zambia |
Bolivia
Brazil
Colombia
Ecuador
French Guiana
Guyana
Panama
Peru
Suriname
Venezuela |
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