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Mrs. Joey, Seattle Age and Occupation: 28, Project Administrator for Public Health NGO Fiance's Age and Occupation: 30, High School History Teacher Engagement Date: June 24, 2008 Wedding Date: August 2009 Venue: Eastside Catholic Chapel and Lake Union Cafe About Me: I'm a Seattle girl through and through except for the fact that I don't drink coffee. I love my job most of the time because I get to travel and work with brilliant people who are trying to prevent Malaria. I love DIY projects of all sorts, cooking, and watching sports. I'd wear anything at Anthropologie and could spend all day on Etsy. I love to travel but shouldn't because I always get myself into unbelievable situations!
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Do Your Honeymoon Homework!

May 25th, 2009 @ 2:06 pm by Mrs. Joey

Ms. Peep Toe’s post about vaccines reminded me that I have wanted to do a post about travel planning.

Disclaimer: I am not a travel agent or doctor, but I do know a little something because of the nature of my work.

If you are going to somewhere outside the country you are not familiar with (even places in the Caribbean or Mexico), please, PLEASE check the CDC’s Traveler’s Health website. I cannot stress this enough! I don’t know how many people I meet on trips who never thought to check about vaccines or other preventative medicines and wonder why they got sick. Even seasoned travelers can forget.

If there are any warnings about your vacation locale, I’d see your doctor, or better yet, go to a travel medicine clinic. Almost every university has one, as do most county public health centers. I say this because diseases can be specific to a region in a country. For example, malaria is prevalent in Ethiopia, but if you will only be in the capital city of Addis Ababa, then you don’t have to take malaria prevention medication. The mosquitoes that carry malaria can’t live in an altitude as high as Addis Ababa. But don’t take my word for it; double check with your doctor. :) Travel clinics will go through your whole itinerary and help you determine which vaccines are necessary, precautionary, or just a good idea in general.

See your physician or visit the travel clinic early. Not only do you want to be bruise free on your honeymoon, but you want to insure that you can get your prescriptions.

Last April there was a shortage of the Yellow Fever vaccine in Seattle. I called around for weeks to get a shot. Also, drugs like Malarone (malaria drug) aren’t always stocked at your local pharmacy. It can take a few days to get them. Some preventative drugs need to be taken a few days before you arrive at your honeymoon destination to be effective.

If you’re on a budget, check on the vaccines needed to travel to your selected honeymoon destination before you book the trip. Not all insurance companies will cover vaccines and preventative medicine for an overseas trip. The bill for my last vaccine/prescription was over $900. My employer paid those costs, since I was traveling for work, so didn’t have to worry about it. But $900 per person is a lot of money, especially if you don’t know a bill like this is coming.

If you are on a medication, besides bringing an ample supply on trip, don’t forget to bring a copy of your prescription or just have the names of your drugs written down. What if you lose your medication? You need to know what you are on, and the doses you take, so you can have it refilled at a local pharmacy.

As for general safety, I always check the State Department’s website before I travel. I like to be aware of what’s going on. You maybe headed to a very peaceful country, but unknowingly during elections. An event like an election can disrupt travel through out the country, be labeled a holiday (where everything is closed) and even the most peaceful countries spark a little violence in some areas.

Also, if you are going to be away for more than a week or two, why not register with the local US Embassy or Consulate? You can do it online on the State Department’s website and it’s really easy. If something happens, then at least they have a record of you. Also, if you lose your passport, it makes it a little easier to get it replaced. It takes 10 minutes to register, but it will save so much time and sanity in the event something goes wrong while you’re away.

Lastly, make copies of your passport and itinerary and leave them with friends and relatives. It’s just a good precaution. A coworker had her purse and passport stolen on a trip, and luckily we had a copy of all her travel documents in Seattle. We faxed over copies of her passport and visa, and she was able to get a new passport and exit visa in a few days.

I hoped this helped a little. Again, I am not a medical professional. I work in the malaria prevention field, so I’ve picked up a thing or 5. :)

What else do people need to prepare for your honeymoon that they sometimes forget?

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8 Responses to “Do Your Honeymoon Homework!”

1.
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Member
tuliplove (message)  59 posts, Worker bee

Thank you! I’m so glad you blogged about this. I’m a med student and I see so many people that travel without proper vaccines and other meds and it makes me so frustrated! When I went to Costa Rica last summer I did my homework (via Safeway’s travel clinic) I needed: typhoid vaccine, Hep A vaccine, malaria prophylaxis and got an antibiotic prescription for traveler’s diarrhea (and let me tell you, while it seemed silly to buy meds for a disease I just “might” get, it was my holy grail when I was laying moaning on the bathroom floor - and I was ridiculously careful about what we ate/drank over there). You don’t want to spend your vacation sick and trying to navigate medical systems in which you might not speak the language, be prepared! Bugs don’t stop biting just because you’re a tourist ;)

 
2.
Mrs. Penguin
Bee
Mrs. Penguin (message)  2,148 posts, Buzzing bee

Great info Miss J… I never look into shots~! Living life a little too dangerously eh?

 
3.
Miss Bear Cub
Bee
Miss Bear Cub (message)  1,350 posts, Bumble bee

Miss Joey - what’s your personal preference between doxycycline and malarone? doxy is just SO cheap compared with malarone.

 
4.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Peep Toe (message)  1,636 posts, Bumble bee

Thanks for the much more thorough post Joey!! I think I’ll register at the Embassy!

 
5.
JennyBryde
Member
JennyBryde (message)  1,148 posts, Bumble bee

This is super helpful! I had not even really considered this part of trip planning. Thanks!

 
6.
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Bee
Miss Joey (message)  829 posts, Busy bee

@Miss Bear Cub: My boss is an expert in the field and tells all of us to go with the Malarone. It’s more expensive but the side effects are fewer.

 
7.
eileen marie
Member
eileen marie (message)  373 posts, Helper bee

Thank you for great advice! (I had 7 shots & 2 scrips to travel to India this summer totaling over $240 after insurance!)

 
8.
Miss Gloss
Bee
Miss Gloss (message)  1,053 posts, Bumble bee

great post! I def wouldn’t have thought about those things!!

 


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Mrs. Joey Mrs. Joey, Seattle Age and Occupation: 28, Project Administrator for Public Health NGO Fiance's Age and Occupation: 30, High School History Teacher Engagement Date: June 24, 2008 Wedding Date: August 2009 Venue: Eastside Catholic Chapel and Lake Union Cafe About Me: I'm a Seattle girl through and through except for the fact that I don't drink coffee. I love my job most of the time because I get to travel and work with brilliant people who are trying to prevent Malaria. I love DIY projects of all sorts, cooking, and watching sports. I'd wear anything at Anthropologie and could spend all day on Etsy. I love to travel but shouldn't because I always get myself into unbelievable situations!
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