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In September 1999, the International Society of Travel Medicine (ISTM) began the process of creating the Body of Knowledge for the practice of travel medicine. This blueprint for the educational needs of a practicing travel medicine provider has been revised three times since its original release (2006, 2012 and 2017) and is available online (http://www.istm.org/bodyofknowledge2). This outline provides the main content areas and relative weighting of topics that are mapped to the ISTM Certificate of Knowledge exam. The exam was first given in 2003 in New York City and has subsequently been administered globally at least once a year in conjunction with the Congress of the ISTM (CISM) or a regional travel medicine meeting. Successfully completing the exam confers the Certificate in Travel Health (CTH) credential. As of January 2018, the exam had been given 16 times with now more than 2500 CTH exam holders representing 67 countries.1 The CTH exam is taken by physicians, pharmacists and nurses. From country to country and profession to profession, there is a wide variety of travel clinic practice and the training of travel medicine providers. One-time assessments, such as the CTH exam, are important to establishing a standard level of knowledge, but ongoing education that focuses on the knowledge and skills necessary to provide the pre-travel clinic consultation should be a priority.2 A recent bibliometric mapping of the Journal of Travel Medicine with the ISTM Body of Knowledge revealed that articles published since 1994 have covered the major areas of emphasis, especially pre-travel/consultation (30.5% of all published articles).3

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