Let’s be real, when was the last time you though about travel vaccines? If the answer is “when I was filling out a visa form three days before flying,” you’re not alone. It happens every single summer without fail. Families across the UAE get so caught up in the exciting parts of trip planning that the health side of things gets pushed to the very bottom of the to-do list. Between booking flights, sorting visas, and figuring out what to pack, vaccinations are probably the last thing on your mind. But UAE doctors are saying it’s time to move them a lot higher up the list. Don’t know what that means? I have all the details you need to know about what doctors are waning UAE residents against, so keep reading to find out more.
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Your Regular Vaccinations Probably Aren’t Enough
The problem is, vaccines aren’t something you can just tick off the night before. Some need multiple rounds of doses. Others take weeks to actually start working in your body. Show up to a clinic four days before departure and you might walk away with a jab. But not necessarily with any real protection. A lot of people assume they’re covered on holiday because they’re up to date on routine jabs. It may be true sometimes, but more often than not, it isn’t. Different destinations come with different health risks, and your standard immunisation history doesn’t always account for those.
Travelling through parts of Africa? Yellow fever vaccination can be a hard entry requirement. No certificate, no entry. Heading to Asia? Typhoid and hepatitis vaccines are widely recommended, especially if you’re eating street food or travelling somewhere where water quality isn’t guaranteed. And while there’s no standard vaccine for malaria, there are preventive medications that are absolutely worth talking to your doctor about before you go.
Oh, and don’t forget boosters. A vaccine you had years ago might need topping up. It’s one of those things that quietly slips through the cracks. And days before your 10-day holiday isn’t enough to patch it up.
Higher Risk Demographic
For most healthy adults, leaving things a bit late is stressful but manageable. For others, it can be a much bigger deal. Young children, pregnant women, older adults, and anyone living with a chronic condition. Think diabetes, heart disease, or a weakened immune system, are at significantly higher risk when they’re in crowded spaces like airports or religious gatherings, or travelling somewhere with a very different disease landscape.
Doctors are specifically recommending that anyone in these groups books a travel health appointment at least four to six weeks before departure. That timeline exists for a reason. It gives your body enough time to actually build immunity, allows multi-dose vaccines to be completed properly, and means you’re not dealing with any post-jab side effects while you’re mid-journey.
Just Book The Appointment – Maybe Even Before Your Visa Appointment
Honestly, this is one of those things that takes very little effort but makes a huge difference. One appointment with your doctor or a travel health clinic (ideally well before you fly) and you’ll know exactly what you need/ Tailored to where you’re going, who you’re travelling with, and your own health history. Way more reliable than disappearing down a Google rabbit hole at midnight.
Summer travel should be exciting, not stressful. Get this one sorted early and you can actually enjoy the countdown.