WISATAWAN ASING DENGAN PENYAKIT INFEKSI SALURAN NAFAS YANG DIRAWAT DI RSUP SANGLAH - DENPASAR - BALI

  • Ida Bagus Ngurah Ra
  • I Gede Ketut Sajinadiyasa

Abstract

Each year 1 billion passengers travel by air, and over 50 million people from industrialized countries visit the developing
world and Bali is one of their choice. Travelers may be exposed to variety of pathogens and risk, and 20 to 70 percent of people
report some health problems while traveling. After diarrhea, respiratory infection is the most common illness affecting travelers.
The aim of the study was to now characteristic foreign patients with respiratory infections hospitalized at Sanglah General
Hospital. We have done retrospectif study to medical record of foreign patients hospitalized at Sanglah General Hospital on
January 2004 Ð June 2008.We had 17 patients with 13 (76.47%) Pneumonia and 4(23.53%) COPD with acute exacerbation, 13
man and 4 woman, the mean of age 55.33 years old and more patients ³ 60 years old. Country of origin of patients mostly
Australia, US, Germany, Nederland. Patients outcome; improve 14 (82.4%) and die 3 (17.6%), mean length of stay 4.35 days.
Two die patients more than 60 years old and one below than 60 years but with coronary heart disease. The conclusion of this study
is respiratory infection who hospitalized at Sanglah General Hospital are dominated by pneumonia and eldery, possibility of
infected respiratory disease seem higher in longer flight

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Author Biographies

Ida Bagus Ngurah Ra
Divisi Pulmonologi Bag/SMF Ilmu Penyakit Dalam FK Unud/RSUP Sanglah Denpasar Bali
I Gede Ketut Sajinadiyasa
Divisi Pulmonologi Bag/SMF Ilmu Penyakit Dalam FK Unud/RSUP Sanglah Denpasar Bali
How to Cite
NGURAH RA, Ida Bagus; SAJINADIYASA, I Gede Ketut. WISATAWAN ASING DENGAN PENYAKIT INFEKSI SALURAN NAFAS YANG DIRAWAT DI RSUP SANGLAH - DENPASAR - BALI. journal of internal medicine, [S.l.], nov. 2012. Available at: <https://ojs.unud.ac.id/index.php/jim/article/view/3894>. Date accessed: 02 nov. 2024.
Section
Articles

Keywords

foreign travelers, respiratory infections