Safari country · the Amazon · Southeast Asia’s borderlands
Malaria prophylaxis matched to your exact route — Malarone or doxycycline, chosen by a physician against CDC maps, not guesswork. $49 flat.
Route is everything
All Kenyan game parks carry risk; central Nairobi barely does. Bangkok needs nothing; the Thai borders need the right drug for local resistance. Your physician reads the CDC map for your exact itinerary — that’s the product.
The regimen
Malarone: one tablet daily with food, from 1–2 days before the risk zone until 7 days after. Doxycycline: daily, but 4 weeks after — cheaper for long trips, with real sun-sensitivity to respect on the equator.
The discipline
Missed doses forfeit protection. Your plan includes the exact calendar, because the drug only works if the schedule does.
The prescription, precisely
Take 1 adult tablet by mouth once daily with food, starting 1–2 days before entering the malaria-risk area, every day there, and for 7 days after leaving.
Dosing per CDC Yellow Book 2026. Your physician confirms fit and quantity for your itinerary — nothing is issued automatically.
The honest part
Pills are half the defense — bite avoidance is the other half, and in a few regions (and for some travelers) the right answer is a different drug or an in-person consult. When that’s you, your plan says so instead of pretending.
$49 flat · reviewed by Adam Z. Kawalek, MD · full refund if we can’t help