Facilities and Health Information
					    
				Medical facilities are poorly equipped and extremely limited, both in the capital city and throughout Guinea. Medicines are in short supply and of questionable quality, sterility of equipment should not be assumed, and treatment is frequently unreliable. Some private medical facilities provide a better range of treatment options than public facilities, but are still well below western standards. There is one ambulance in Conakry but there are no ambulance or emergency rescue services in Guinea. Trauma care is extremely limited. Water in Guinea is presumed to be contaminated, so travelers should use only bottled or distilled water for drinking. Malaria is a serious risk to travelers in Guinea; prophylaxis against malaria, purchased in the United States, is recommended. For additional information on malaria, including protective measures, visit CDC’s malaria web page. In addition, in recent years, meningitis outbreaks have occurred periodically, in particular during the rainy season and especially in the eastern part of the country, but also in the capital; therefore vaccination against meningitis is recommended.			
			
			
			
						
									
Drinking Water Source - % of rural population improved
					    
				65%			
			
			
			
						
									
Drinking Water Source - % of total population unimproved
					    
				25.2%			
			
			
			
						
									
Drinking Water Source - % of urban population improved
					    
				92.200000			
			
			
			
						
									
HIV/AIDS - adult prevalence rate
					    
				1.3%			
			
			
			
						
									
Hospital Bed Density - beds/1,000 population
					    
				.3			
			
			
			
						
									
People Living with HIV/AIDS
					    
				79,000			
			
			
			
						
									
Physicians Density - physicians/1,000 population
					    
				.1			
			
			
			
						
									
Sanitation Facility Access - % of total population unimproved
					    
				81.1%			
			
			
			
						
									
Sanitation Facility Access - % of urban population improved
					    
				32.700000			
			
			
			
						
									
Sanitation Facility Access - % of rural population improved
					    
				11.2%			
			
			
			
						
									
Infectious Diseases - degree of risk
					    
				Very high			
			
			
			
						
									
Animal Contact Disease (s)
					    
				rabies			
			
			
			
						
									
Food or Waterborne Disease (s)
					    
				bacterial and protozoal diarrhea, hepatitis A, and typhoid fever			
			
			
			
						
									
Soil contact disease (s)
					    
				Lassa fever			
			
			
			
						
									
Vectorborne Disease (s)
					    
				malaria, dengue fever, and yellow fever			
			
			
			
						
									
Water contact disease (s)
					    
				schistosomiasis