🌎 Country Health Checker
Find destination-specific health advice, required vaccinations, and risk information for your trip โ powered by NaTHNaC, the UK's official travel health authority.
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💉 Travel Vaccinations
The right vaccinations depend on your destination, activities, and health history. Book at least 6โ8 weeks before travel โ some vaccines require multiple doses.
🇫🇷 NHS-Funded Travel Vaccines
These vaccinations are available free of charge on the NHS when recommended for your destination:
- ✓ Hepatitis A โ most developing countries
- ✓ Typhoid โ South Asia, Africa, Latin America
- ✓ Cholera โ high-risk areas
- ✓ Polio booster โ if routine course incomplete
- ✓ Tetanus/Diphtheria/Polio โ if booster due
- ✓ Meningitis ACWY โ for Hajj / Umrah pilgrims
ℹ️ NHS vaccines are only funded for clinically recommended destinations โ not for general "top-up" purposes.
💳 Privately-Funded Vaccines
Some travel vaccines are not available on the NHS and must be paid for privately:
- 💉 Yellow Fever โ required for entry to many African and South American countries
- 💉 Japanese Encephalitis โ rural Asia, longer trips
- 💉 Rabies โ remote travel, working with animals
- 💉 Hepatitis B โ if not already immune
- 💉 Tick-borne Encephalitis โ forested areas of Europe and Asia
- 💉 Meningitis BCWY โ sub-Saharan Africa dry season
📌 Mandatory Vaccines
Some countries require proof of vaccination for entry โ you will be turned away without a valid certificate:
- ⚠️ Yellow Fever Certificate (IHR) โ required by many countries in Africa and South America, and for travellers arriving from endemic regions
- ⚠️ Meningitis ACWY โ required for Hajj and Umrah pilgrims entering Saudi Arabia
- ⚠️ Polio certificate โ required by some countries for travellers from polio-endemic nations
Always check entry requirements for your specific destination before travel.
⌛ When to Book Your Vaccinations
Ideal time to book. Allows multiple doses, antibody response, and time to arrange anti-malarials.
Still time for most vaccines. Some multi-dose schedules may need accelerating. Book urgently.
Some protection is still possible. Call us immediately โ we can advise on what is still feasible.
Seek advice on mosquito bite prevention, food safety, and where to access care if needed.
🦑 Malaria Prevention
Malaria is a serious and sometimes fatal disease transmitted by mosquito bites. The right precautions can protect you effectively.
The ABCD of Malaria Prevention
Awareness
Know if your destination has malaria risk. Check NaTHNaC country information and be aware of the symptoms: fever, chills, headache, muscle aches, vomiting.
Bite Prevention
Use DEET-based repellent (50% for adults), wear long sleeves and trousers after dusk, use permethrin-treated nets, stay in air-conditioned/screened accommodation.
Chemoprophylaxis
Take anti-malarial tablets as prescribed for your destination โ start before travel, take throughout, and complete the course after returning. Never skip doses.
Diagnosis
Seek urgent medical attention if you develop a fever up to 1 year after returning from a malaria-risk area. Tell the doctor where you have been.
Common Anti-Malaria Tablets
| Medication | Typical Destinations | When to Start | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Atovaquone/Proguanil (Malarone) | Most malaria-risk areas | 1โ2 days before | Take with food. Continue for 7 days after return. |
| Doxycycline | Southeast Asia, Africa | 1โ2 days before | Daily tablet. Can cause sun sensitivity โ use high SPF. |
| Mefloquine (Lariam) | Some parts of Africa, Oceania | 2โ3 weeks before | Weekly tablet. Not suitable for everyone. Can cause vivid dreams. |
| Chloroquine + Proguanil | Some parts of South Asia, Central America | 1 week before | Resistance in many areas. Discuss with pharmacist. |
ℹ️ The right medication depends on your destination, health history and trip duration. Speak to our pharmacist for personalised advice.
🧭 General Travel Health Tips
Beyond vaccinations and malaria, here are the essential travel health precautions every traveller should know.
Food & Water Safety
- In high-risk countries: drink only bottled or boiled water
- Avoid ice cubes, raw salads, and unpeeled fruit
- "Boil it, cook it, peel it, or forget it"
- Carry oral rehydration salts for travellers' diarrhoea
- Anti-diarrhoeals (loperamide) and antibiotics โ ask your pharmacist
Sun & Heat Safety
- Use SPF 30+ broad-spectrum sunscreen, reapply every 2 hours
- Avoid the midday sun (11amโ3pm)
- Drink 2โ3 litres of water per day in hot climates
- Wear loose, light-coloured, breathable clothing
- Know the signs of heat exhaustion and heat stroke
Flying & DVT
- On flights over 4 hours: walk around every hour, stay hydrated
- Wear compression socks if at risk of blood clots
- Tell your pharmacist if you have had a DVT before
- Avoid alcohol and sedatives โ they increase clot risk
- Flex your calf muscles regularly while seated
Travel Health Kit
- Prescription medicines (enough for your whole trip, plus extra)
- Anti-malarials, antihistamines, pain relief (paracetamol/ibuprofen)
- Oral rehydration sachets, antiseptic cream, plasters
- DEET insect repellent (50%), high-SPF sunscreen
- European Health Insurance Card (EHIC / GHIC) for Europe
- Travel insurance with medical cover โ essential
Insect Bite Prevention
- Apply DEET 50% repellent to exposed skin โ reapply every 4 hours
- Wear long sleeves and trousers, especially at dawn and dusk
- Use permethrin spray on clothing and bed nets
- Sleep under an impregnated mosquito net where provided
- Avoid perfumed products โ they attract mosquitoes
Safe Sex Abroad
- Carry condoms โ local supplies may be unreliable quality
- HIV, hepatitis B, gonorrhoea and chlamydia are higher risk in some destinations
- Emergency contraception available from our pharmacy
- PrEP is available for HIV prevention โ speak to your GP or sexual health clinic before travelling
- Get tested on return if there's any risk
Not sure what you need? Book a travel health consultation with our pharmacist โ we'll review your itinerary, health history, and provide personalised recommendations.
Book Consultation🎥 Travel Health Videos
Expert guidance on staying healthy when travelling abroad.
Travel Vaccinations
Which vaccinations you may need before travelling and how to access them on the NHS.
NHS travel vaccines →Malaria Prevention
How to protect yourself from malaria using the ABCD approach โ awareness, bites, chemoprophylaxis, diagnosis.
NHS malaria guidance →Food & Water Safety
How to avoid travellers' diarrhoea and food-borne illness when travelling to high-risk destinations.
NaTHNaC guidance →DVT & Long-Haul Flights
Understanding the risks of deep vein thrombosis on long flights and how to reduce them.
NHS DVT guidance →Sun Safety Abroad
Protecting yourself from the sun in hot climates โ sunscreen, heat stroke prevention, and hydration.
NHS sun safety →Yellow Fever Vaccine
When yellow fever vaccination is required and what to expect from the certificate process.
NaTHNaC guidance →Trusted Travel Health Resources
Official and expert travel health information sources.
NaTHNaC Country Information
The official UK travel health authority โ detailed country-by-country health risk information, vaccination requirements, and advice.
Visit travelhealthpro.org.uk →NHS Travel Vaccinations
NHS guide to travel vaccines โ which are free, which are private, and how to get them before you travel.
Read on NHS.uk →Fit for Travel
NHS Scotland's travel health resource with country guides, disease information, and vaccination advice.
Visit fitfortravel.nhs.scot →FCDO Travel Advice
UK Foreign Commonwealth & Development Office โ safety and security travel advisories for every country.
Visit gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice →Malaria โ NHS
NHS guidance on malaria prevention, symptoms, and treatment โ including information on anti-malarial tablets.
Read on NHS.uk →WHO International Travel & Health
World Health Organization's international travel and health guide โ the global standard for travel health advice.
Visit who.int →