Malaria Prevention for Travellers
For educational purposes only — not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider. For adults 18+.
Malaria is one of the most serious — and most preventable — travel illnesses. This guide explains how malaria spreads, where the risk is, and the layered prevention plan you build with a travel clinic.
How malaria is spread, where risk is highest, antimalarial tablets in plain terms, mosquito-bite prevention, recognising symptoms, and why a clinic visit matters.
What's inside
- →How malaria spreads — the mosquito link
- →Where the risk is — destination matters
- →Antimalarial tablets — an overview, not a prescription
- →Bite prevention — your first line of defence
- →Symptoms to know — fever after travel
- →Your travel clinic — the plan that fits you
For educational purposes only
This guide is educational information about staying healthy while travelling — it is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it is not a substitute for care from a qualified doctor or travel clinic. It does not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition. See a doctor or travel-health clinic ideally 4–6 weeks before you travel for vaccinations, malaria prevention, and advice tailored to your destination and health, and check official sources such as your national travel-health service or the CDC. Carry adequate travel insurance. Seek medical care for serious or persistent symptoms while abroad; in an emergency, call the local emergency number or 911.