Demographics including age, gender, country of birth, date of migration, and previous participation in the Hajj are routinely documented in
Hajj pilgrims attending both Travel Medicine Centers. Structured anonymous questionnaires addressing travel history (dates and destinations of past and planned travel before and after the Hajj, during the year 2010) were directly Torin 1 molecular weight administered before vaccination by physicians. Data were analyzed with SPSS 17.02 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). Two-tailed tests were used for all comparisons. Differences in proportion were tested using the chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test as appropriate. Contrasts of dimensional variables were tested using the Student’s t-test and Levene test as appropriate. Statistical significance was defined as p < 0.05. Sex ratio (male/female) Barasertib was 1.19 and median age 62 years (range 19–87 y). Most of the individuals were traveling to Saudi Arabia for the first time (72.5%). Countries
of birth were located mainly in North Africa (90.7%) with 48.7% in Algeria, 25.0% in Morocco, and 15.0% in Tunisia. The remaining pilgrims were born in France (6.5%), other European countries (4.7%), and sub-Saharan Africa (2.4%), notably in Senegal and Comoros. Most out-born pilgrims appeared to live in France for at least 20 years (83.1%). Four hundred twenty-one (66.6%) pilgrims reported having traveled out of France before the Hajj during the year Adenosine triphosphate 2010. Most of them traveled to North Africa with Algeria and Morocco as the leading countries (Table 1). Most travels took place during the summer season for 1 to 4 months before the Hajj of November 2010. Pilgrims who traveled
before the Hajj were significantly older compared to those who did not (61.3 vs 56.7 y, p < 0.001) with perhaps a slight preponderance of female (65.6% vs 64.0%, p = 0.121). The proportion of pilgrims who traveled before the Hajj was significantly lower in those born in France compared to those born in North Africa (39.0% vs 65.3%, p < 0.001). One hundred sixty-three (25.9%) pilgrims planned to delay their return to France after leaving Saudi Arabia, while 276 (43.9%) had no such plan and 190 (30.2%) did not know at the time they were questioned. Three pilgrims provided no information. Among those who had a planned travel, North Africa was the most frequent destination, and the travel was scheduled soon after the Hajj in most instances (83.4%). No significant gender differences were observed between pilgrims traveling outside France after returning from the Hajj and those returning to France. The mean age of pilgrims who planned to travel out of France after the Hajj was significantly higher than that of pilgrims who did not (61.9 vs 58.0 y, p = 0.002). The proportion of pilgrims who planned to travel after the Hajj was 27.7% in those born in Algeria, 27.2% in those born in Morocco, and 26.6% in those born in Tunisia.
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