Seven benefits of using pre-travel health screening

It can be an uncomfortable and frightening experience to fall ill overseas, during an assignment or business trip, where you are unfamiliar or uncomfortable accessing local healthcare.

Issues associated with healthcare may even cause an overseas assignment to fail. It is a frustrating fact that many illnesses experienced overseas could have been foreseen or prevented if health screening had occurred before travel. Despite the benefits it offers both staff and employers, health screening before sending staff overseas is currently under-utilised.

Here are seven benefits for employees and employers of using health screening before sending staff overseas:

Benefits

  • Identifies new and pre-existing illness as well as illnesses that the individual may be at higher risk of developing. Once identified, steps can be taken to prevent or manage these appropriately.
  • Reduces the need to access overseas healthcare, particularly important for those travelling to more remote locations or less developed countries.
  • Ensures treatment for pre-existing conditions is maintained and managed with minimal disruption. A regularly prescribed medication in the UK may not be readily available or legal in the new host country. Health screening enables employers to investigate suitable healthcare before travel. Any medication can be evaluated to ensure medicines are available at the destination.
  • Where a higher risk has been identified screening gives individuals the opportunity to take preventative measures such as immunisation and vaccines or lifestyle changes.
  • Enables the company to identify any trends across the organisation and manage them proactively.
  • Screening allows an employer to insure based on actual data about its own employees rather than have premiums set based on averages.
  • It can reduce costs and support decision making when travel insurance options are being considered.

Health screening is an important consideration for companies of all sizes. Employers should make far greater use of it before sending staff overseas as it protects both the individual and the company, reduces the risk of assignments failing and can help to manage costs.

Sarah Dennis, Head of International, The Health Insurance Group

Read more

Latest News

Read More

Wellbeing pays: the ROI HR can’t ignore

9 October 2025

Skills

7 October 2025

How to build a skills-based strategy

A key challenge for organisations looking at their skills strategy is getting their job data under control. Discover how creating a single source of truth...

Artificial Intelligence, Globalisation

7 October 2025

Talent strategies for business expansion and growth

Global Expansion 2025: Powerful Talent Management Strategies for a Diverse and AI-Driven Workforce....

Newsletter

Receive the latest HR news and strategic content

Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

Latest HR Jobs

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine – Human ResourcesSalary: £39,432 to £45,097 per annum (pro-rata) inclusive

Harper Adams University – Human ResourcesSalary: £46,049 to £50,253 per annum. Grade 10

University of Cambridge – Department of Clinical NeurosciencesSalary: £27,319 to £31,236

Royal Conservatoire of ScotlandSalary: £52,074 to £58,611

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE