# Travellers with prosthetic limbs, a neglected population. A perspective on what travel health practitioners need to know

**Authors:** Irmgard L. Bauer, Vikranth H. Nagaraja

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s40794-024-00226-z · Tropical Diseases, Travel Medicine and Vaccines · 2024-08-15

## TL;DR

This paper highlights the lack of travel health guidelines for people with prosthetic limbs and provides preliminary recommendations to address this gap.

## Contribution

This is the first paper to address travel health for people with prosthetic limbs, offering initial guidance in the absence of evidence-based guidelines.

## Key findings

- No evidence-based guidelines exist for travel health practitioners caring for people with prosthetic limbs.
- Travel advice includes trip preparation, packing, air travel, and navigating airport security.
- The paper calls for urgent research and education updates to improve care for this neglected population.

## Abstract

The benefits of travel for the wellbeing of people of all ages and abilities are well known, though travellers with prostheses have so far been excluded. Limb loss, due to trauma, vascular disease, cancer, or infections requires a prosthesis for cosmesis and functionality. The life-changing event of losing a limb and the considerable psychological adjustment to accept an altered body image influence rehabilitation and self-management as well as the participation in social activities, such as sport and travel. The challenge of travel lies not only in transferring practical impediments encountered at home to another location; familiar coping strategies may require unexpected adjustments. After presenting background information on limb loss and prostheses, the purpose of this paper was to review literature on health advice for travellers with prosthetic limbs.

All major data bases were searched for peer-reviewed literature using a variation of keyword combinations around travel and prosthetics. Relevant journals were searched individually, and selected authors and university departments contacted. No evidence-based results were obtained. The search then moved to grey literature including documents from relevant organisations, professional bodies, government websites, manufacturers, airlines, prosthetic/physiotherapy clinics, sport organisations to approaching amputees, including veterans and athletes, directly.

The list of collated travel advice for people with artificial limbs relates to (1) trip preparation, (2) packing (especially considering the mechanical and/or electrical requirements of the prosthesis), (3) travelling by plane as the most covered mode of travel, and (4) navigating airports and airport security, which may be used by travel health practitioners while awaiting evidence-based guidelines.

This is the first paper on travel with a prosthetic limb in any field, including travel medicine. Therefore, travel health practitioners have no evidence-based guidelines at their disposal required for high-quality care for this neglected population. Preliminary recommendations for clinical practice, advice for required updates in education, and suggestions for urgently needed research are provided to replace current hints and tips with evidence so that travellers with prostheses are no longer ‘out on a limb’.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** cancer (MONDO:0004992)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Limb loss (MESH:D001259), trauma (MESH:D014947), vascular disease (MESH:D014652), infections (MESH:D007239), cancer (MESH:D009369), amputees (MESH:D000081042)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

11 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11325610/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11325610