Chikungunya Disease Awareness Among U.S. Travelers to Caribbean Destinations

<strong>Introduction:</strong> This study investigated chikungunya disease awareness and its predictors, the level of adoption of recommended personal protective behaviors against chikungunya, and the health information-seeking behavior of U.S. travelers to Caribbean destinations.<br...

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Main Authors: Oghenekaro Omodior, Lori Pennington-Gray, Stephen Holland, Brijesh Thapa, Spiro Kiousis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Travel Medicine Center of Iran 2017-02-01
Series:International Journal of Travel Medicine and Global Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijtmgh.com/article_43363_0ff4b0d75f7669a2a91829caead438fd.pdf
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spelling doaj-e2a3433a3e75409c8f467638b41de4692020-11-25T01:39:11ZengInternational Travel Medicine Center of IranInternational Journal of Travel Medicine and Global Health2322-11002476-57592017-02-0151202710.15171/ijtmgh.2017.0443363Chikungunya Disease Awareness Among U.S. Travelers to Caribbean DestinationsOghenekaro Omodior0Lori Pennington-Gray1Stephen Holland2Brijesh Thapa3Spiro Kiousis4Department of Recreation, Park and Tourism Studies, School of Public Health, Indiana University Bloomington, Bloomington, USADepartment of Tourism, Recreation & Sport Management, University of Florida, Gainesville, USADepartment of Tourism, Recreation & Sport Management, University of Florida, Gainesville, USADepartment of Tourism, Recreation & Sport Management, University of Florida, Gainesville, USACollege of Journalism and Communications, University of Florida, Gainesville, USA<strong>Introduction:</strong> This study investigated chikungunya disease awareness and its predictors, the level of adoption of recommended personal protective behaviors against chikungunya, and the health information-seeking behavior of U.S. travelers to Caribbean destinations.<br /><strong>Methods:</strong> A cross-sectional retrospective online survey of 653 adult U.S. international travelers who visited any one of 34 Caribbean destinations was conducted in October 2015. Study participants were recruited through Amazon® Mechanical Turk. Travelers who met the inclusion criteria and gave informed consent were subsequently redirected to complete the survey which was domiciled in Qualtrics®.<br /><strong>Results:</strong> Results regarding health information-seeking behavior indicated that 51% of study participants had never sought information about chikungunya or any vector-borne illnesses. Only thirty percent of study participants reported having heard of chikungunya disease before participating in this study. After adjusting for the presence of other variables in a logistic regression model, gender of female, higher levels of education, more time spent at the destination, and a higher number of hours spent engaging in outdoor activities were factors significantly associated with chikungunya disease awareness. Study results also showed that twenty-two percent of study participants did not engage in any of the three recommended personal protective behaviors under investigation.<br /><strong>Conclusion:</strong> Study findings highlighted a gap in existing approaches to health information dissemination vis-à-vis adoption of recommended personal protective behaviors, especially for U.S. travelers at risk for chikungunya and other emerging mosquito-borne infectious diseases in Caribbean destinations.http://www.ijtmgh.com/article_43363_0ff4b0d75f7669a2a91829caead438fd.pdfChikungunya awarenessU.S. travelersCaribbean destinationPersonal-protective behavior
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oghenekaro Omodior
Lori Pennington-Gray
Stephen Holland
Brijesh Thapa
Spiro Kiousis
spellingShingle Oghenekaro Omodior
Lori Pennington-Gray
Stephen Holland
Brijesh Thapa
Spiro Kiousis
Chikungunya Disease Awareness Among U.S. Travelers to Caribbean Destinations
International Journal of Travel Medicine and Global Health
Chikungunya awareness
U.S. travelers
Caribbean destination
Personal-protective behavior
author_facet Oghenekaro Omodior
Lori Pennington-Gray
Stephen Holland
Brijesh Thapa
Spiro Kiousis
author_sort Oghenekaro Omodior
title Chikungunya Disease Awareness Among U.S. Travelers to Caribbean Destinations
title_short Chikungunya Disease Awareness Among U.S. Travelers to Caribbean Destinations
title_full Chikungunya Disease Awareness Among U.S. Travelers to Caribbean Destinations
title_fullStr Chikungunya Disease Awareness Among U.S. Travelers to Caribbean Destinations
title_full_unstemmed Chikungunya Disease Awareness Among U.S. Travelers to Caribbean Destinations
title_sort chikungunya disease awareness among u.s. travelers to caribbean destinations
publisher International Travel Medicine Center of Iran
series International Journal of Travel Medicine and Global Health
issn 2322-1100
2476-5759
publishDate 2017-02-01
description <strong>Introduction:</strong> This study investigated chikungunya disease awareness and its predictors, the level of adoption of recommended personal protective behaviors against chikungunya, and the health information-seeking behavior of U.S. travelers to Caribbean destinations.<br /><strong>Methods:</strong> A cross-sectional retrospective online survey of 653 adult U.S. international travelers who visited any one of 34 Caribbean destinations was conducted in October 2015. Study participants were recruited through Amazon® Mechanical Turk. Travelers who met the inclusion criteria and gave informed consent were subsequently redirected to complete the survey which was domiciled in Qualtrics®.<br /><strong>Results:</strong> Results regarding health information-seeking behavior indicated that 51% of study participants had never sought information about chikungunya or any vector-borne illnesses. Only thirty percent of study participants reported having heard of chikungunya disease before participating in this study. After adjusting for the presence of other variables in a logistic regression model, gender of female, higher levels of education, more time spent at the destination, and a higher number of hours spent engaging in outdoor activities were factors significantly associated with chikungunya disease awareness. Study results also showed that twenty-two percent of study participants did not engage in any of the three recommended personal protective behaviors under investigation.<br /><strong>Conclusion:</strong> Study findings highlighted a gap in existing approaches to health information dissemination vis-à-vis adoption of recommended personal protective behaviors, especially for U.S. travelers at risk for chikungunya and other emerging mosquito-borne infectious diseases in Caribbean destinations.
topic Chikungunya awareness
U.S. travelers
Caribbean destination
Personal-protective behavior
url http://www.ijtmgh.com/article_43363_0ff4b0d75f7669a2a91829caead438fd.pdf
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