
Northern Africa

This section includes general information about health hazards
as reported by the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention. The region includes Algeria,
Egypt, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Morocco, and Tunisia. It is characterized
by a generally fertile coastal area and a desert hinterland with
oases that are often foci of infections.
Arthropod-borne diseases are unlikely
to be a major problem to the traveler, although dengue
fever, filariasis (focally in the Nile Delta), leishmaniasis,
malaria, relapsing fever, Rift
Valley fever, sandfly fever, typhus, and West Nile fever do
occur.
Foodborne and waterborne diseases are
endemic; the dysenteries and other diarrheal diseases are particularly
common. Hepatitis A and E occur throughout
the area. Typhoid fever is common in some
areas. Schistosomiasis
(bilharziasis) is prevalent in the Nile Delta area in Egypt and
in the Nile valley; it occurs focally in other countries in the
area. Alimentary helminthic infections, brucellosis, and giardiasis
are common. Echinococcosis (hydatid disease) may occur. Sporadic
cases of cholera occur.
Other hazards include poliomyelitis (also
a food-borne or water-borne disease), however, Egypt is the only
country where confirmed cases of poliomyelitis were still reported
in 1997. Trachoma, rabies, snakes, and
scorpions are hazards in certain areas.
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