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Student travel health and the role of universities and health clinics in New Zealand to prevent imported infections: a cross-sectional study.

Background: Tertiary students are at risk of acquiring infectious diseases during overseas travel as they visit low-income countries, have low perceptions of risk and are unlikely to access travel health advice. Some will visit friends and relatives abroad, a group identified as disproportionately affected by imported infections. There is no national student travel health policy in NZ. This study aimed to explore travel health training of university-based health providers; academics' practices and perceptions of travel health; reasons for travel and countries visited by NZ university students, their travel health uptake and factors affecting decision making about this.

Methods: A cross-sectional study consisting of surveys sent in 2014 to university clinics, senior academics and students.

Results: Surveys were completed by 251 respondents. Three of nine clinicians had only undertaken a short course in travel health. Competing resources and time constraints in health clinics were amongst the barriers to providing optimal services. Of the senior academics, only 14% were able to confirm their university collaborated with health clinics. Sixty seven percent of students were unaware that clinics provided travel health services and 19% had or intended to seek professional travel health advice.

Conclusions: A national policy is warranted involving all stakeholders, utilizing innovative technologies to increase uptake of student travel health services.

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