From the terror attacks in Nice, France to the ongoing spread of the Zika
virus, the past year has been a dizzying one in terms of violence and
disease outbreaks throughout the world. These factors, among others,
increase the likelihood travelers will be required to stay up to date on
travel safety advisories. Using 2016 data from the Canadian government
and The Global Health Data Exchange, HealthGrove, a health visualization site by Graphiq, created an ascending list of the most dangerous countries to travel to.
The Canadian Travel Advice and Advisories
data comprises four major categories — “exercise normal security
precautions,” “exercise a high degree of caution,” “avoid nonessential
travel” and “avoid all travel.” HealthGrove's list includes countries
with at least an "exercise a high degree of caution" rating or higher
and nations are ranked by worsening travel advisories. Ties were broken
by using the Travel Mortality Index, which provides an aggregate score
representing the likelihood of death caused by traveling to a given
country. The higher the index, the higher the probability of traveler
death. The causes of death in the Index vary from diseases like Tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS
to causes like “interpersonal violence,” “exposure to forces of
nature,” “collective violence” and “legal intervention.” The variation
in causes explains why you’ll see France, for example, with a score
(116.2), which is separated from that of Honduras (120.4) by only a few
points.
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