We map your itinerary (urban vs rural, altitude, season) and health conditions (pregnancy, splenectomy, asplenia) to decide vaccines and medications. Official travel health guidance is updated frequently—consult Health Canada’s travel health and CDC Travelers’ Health for destination-specific advice. Yellow fever and other live vaccines require scheduling; some malaria prophylaxis regimens start before departure.

We document prescriptions and emergency contact plans; specialized travel clinics may be required for complex itineraries.

What This Service Includes

Itinerary review

Risks: malaria, dengue, typhoid, altitude illness, animal bites.

Vaccines

Routine catch-up plus hepatitis A/B, typhoid, yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis as indicated.

Medications

Malaria chemoprophylaxis, traveler’s diarrhea standby therapy, DVT risk discussion.

What to Expect

1

Intake

Dates, destinations, prior vaccines, pregnancy, immune status.

2

Plan

Vaccine schedule, prescriptions, fit-to-fly letters if needed.

3

Education

Food/water safety, insect precautions, sun, altitude.

Frequently Asked Questions

Ideally 6–8 weeks for multi-dose series; minimum 4 weeks for many vaccines.

When travel exposes you to malaria risk, we prescribe appropriate prophylaxis and discuss side effects and adherence.

Entry rules vary by country—check official government sites and airlines at booking and again before departure.

Live vaccines may be contraindicated or need timing—bring your medication list and specialist letters.