UAE doctors are urging travelers to arrange vaccinations weeks before summer trips rather than at the last minute.
UAE doctors are warning residents not to leave travel vaccinations until the last minute as the summer travel season begins. Schools have broken for the holidays, and airports across the country are heading into one of their busiest periods of the year.
Many travelers focus on flights, accommodation, and visas while overlooking vaccine requirements. Doctors say people often learn about required vaccines only when they start the visa process, receive travel documents, or sit a few days from departure. That delay can cause stress, disrupt travel plans, and leave travelers exposed to preventable illnesses.
Dr. Malaz Yabrodi, an internal medicine specialist at Medcare Shaikh Saqr Al Qasimi Hospital in Sharjah, said a common mistake is assuming routine vaccinations cover every destination. He said travelers also overlook booster doses and skip advice tailored to their age, medical history, and destination risks. Yabrodi said advance planning matters in the UAE, where residents travel widely during peak holidays.
Hajj and Umrah Travel Vaccines
Religious travel drives much of the demand for vaccine advice. Dr. Qudsia Anjum Fasih, a family medicine specialist at Burjeel Day Surgery Centre in Al Shahama, said most vaccine inquiries at her practice relate to Hajj and Umrah. She said meningococcal and influenza vaccines rank among the key requirements and recommendations for pilgrims.
Fasih said routine vaccinations in government immunization programs should always be completed on schedule. Additional vaccines depend on the destination. Yellow fever vaccination may be required for travel to or from certain African countries. Typhoid and hepatitis vaccines often come up for travelers visiting parts of Asia, where food and waterborne infections carry a higher risk.
She said malaria vaccination is not routinely used for travelers, though preventive medication and mosquito-bite precautions are available and should be discussed based on the destination. Doctors recommend personalized medical advice rather than relying only on online information, since requirements vary widely between countries.
UAE Travel Vaccine Timing
Doctors say leaving vaccinations too close to departure is another recurring problem. Some vaccines need multiple doses. Others take several weeks to provide effective protection. A late appointment can leave a traveler without enough immunity on arrival.
Dr. Mahmoud Medhat Mahmoud Aboumousa, a critical care medicine specialist at International Modern Hospital Dubai, said vaccine requirements often surface late in the planning process. He said this leads to avoidable anxiety, travel disruptions, and incomplete protection against infectious diseases. He also pointed to international guidance that travelers should be fully protected against measles before going abroad.
Aboumousa said vulnerable groups need extra attention. These include young children, older adults, pregnant women, and people with diabetes, heart disease, weak immunity, or chronic respiratory illness. He advised these travelers to seek travel health advice four to six weeks before departure.
He warned that last-minute vaccination may not give the body enough time to build protection. Multi-dose vaccines cannot be completed in time. Side effects may appear during the trip. High-risk travelers may face preventable infections in crowded airports, religious gatherings, rural areas and destinations with different disease patterns.
Stay tuned for more news and updates!

