I normally refer to the Travelvax web site for these questions.
Travelvax Australia
...cheers, mzy
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My family and I are travelling to Thailand in September (Bangkok and Kho Samui), and knowing the level of general travel expertise here, I was wondering what people thought was necessary regarding vaccinations. We have heard that Hep A is really all that is needed, and my family has got that. However, I am finding it difficult to get to the doctor and was wondering if people thought it was really necessary?
I would appreciate your thoughts, but assure you I will not rely on it as medical advice, so don't fear I will try to sue you later if you say it is not necessary and I get sick while there.
I normally refer to the Travelvax web site for these questions.
Travelvax Australia
...cheers, mzy
Thailand is like a second home to me, actually lived there for 3 months last year and travel there on average 1 trip per month.
You need to get the Hep A shots as the water quality is not of drinking standard or even teeth washing standard unless you are staying at top 5 star hotels and even then it is always bottled water in your rooms. Also you need to remember that ice is most likely normal water frozen, not bottled water frozen.
having said all that I have survived going there for the past 4 years but I make sure local water is off the agenda.
My wife also got a Hep B shot as well as another one, I will check tonight and let you know. My son also got whatever vacs he was allowed to at the time as he was only 11 months. I will post the details tomorrow when I find out what they had.
look, i got my family vaccinated fro two reasons, (1 the company was paying and 2 i prefer them not to get sick). I was vaccinated for everything about 10 years back when doing travel to the Philippines so I have no idea how long these things last for but only been sick once in last 4 years travel to Thailand.
I think I am immune now as I do not worry about the ice in drinks anymore, even at local bars etc. It is either immunity or the strength of the scotch.
When I first went to Thailand for work I got the vaccinations before I left. It was Tetanus, Pertussis and Diptheria ( I think these three are the one vaccination), Typhoid, Hep A, Hep B and malaria tablets. From what I understand the Hep A injections did not give me antibodies and I have not bothered going back for more injections and I stopped taking the malaria tablets after 1 year or so.
Do not drink the water and do not even brush your teeth with the tap water. A 600mL bottle of drinking water is only 7 baht (<$0.25) and if you buy a 10L bottle it is even cheaper. Be careful when eating salads as they wash these with tap water. Be careful when eating at street stalls as they only rinse the plates and cups with tap water and do not use disinfectants. Be careful with ice cubes as these are also tap water.
Even trying to avoid tap water at all costs is impossible as you still have to shower and you do build up immunities over time. I have only been sick 3 times in 15 trips, so I have come off relatively unscathed. Enjoy your trip.
Last edited by JohnK; 22nd August 2008 at 08:42 AM.
The Hep A/B vaccinations are actually quite handy for general life - not just travelling. I've been through the various injections with no side-effects.
Note the combined shot is around $80 x 3 plus perhaps a doctor's visit fee or three, so it's not cheap. At least Medibank gave me some rebate on it via my package plus options.
I would also recommend Chickenpox and Measles vac's if you havn't been through those in childhood. Having caught Chickenpox a few years ago in Singapore (I suspect), and experiencing it in adulthood was not a fun experience. At least I managed to get back to Australia for a couple of days before the rash/effects started - otherwise I would have been quarantined in my hotel room for around a week!
MD TravelHealth website also recommends similar vax's to what JohnK suggests.
MD Travel Health - Thailand - vaccinations, malaria, safety, and other medical advice
Malaria shouldn't be a concern if not going into very rural forestry type areas.
You can also get vaccinations over in Bangkok for pretty good prices compared to Australia - for example at the Red Cross centre attached to the Snake Farm. But of course immunity isn't instant, so you need several weeks or multiple shots in some cases to get resistance. I have no experience of getting shots there, but looked into it a couple of years ago, and will probably get the Yellow Fever and a couple of catch up shots next time I'm in BKK.
Note none of this advice should substitute for you visiting a travel doctor or your local doctor for advice over which vaccinations you should get...
I went to my Doc & told him I am going to Thailand - so he gives me this injection which costs around $100 which is a 3-in-1 type shot.
Can't recall the name but he said you only need to do it once every ten years.
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