There is malaria on the island of Roatan. It’s not rampant
and many travelers and even local residents take no prophylaxis,
but it exists and those who contract it from a mosquito bite get
very sick and may be out of commission for weeks. Over the
years, Undercurrent has reported on cases in traveling divers, one
perhaps contracted from a mosquito bite while changing planes
on the mainland.
The Centers for Disease Control recommends anti-malaria
treatment for people visiting mainland Honduras at areas
below 3,200 feet in altitude, as well as Roatan and the other Bay
Islands. The drug of choice is choloroquine, taken once weekly in
a dosage of 500 milligrams. It should be started one to two weeks
before arrival, taken throughout the trip and for four weeks after.
The danger and bother of mosquitoes and no-see-ums can
be substantially reduced with some easy precautions like wearing
long sleeves and pants, especially at dawn and dusk, treating
clothes with the insect repellant permethrin, and liberally applying
bug spray with DEET or picaridin. (For more bug-off details,
read our story “The Skinny on No-See-Ums” in our September
2007 issue, available online at Undercurrent).
- - Doc Vikingo