Cholera vaccine
This is a practical guide to cholera vaccination.
The best part?
We’ll give you only factual information based on reliable sources and our experience.
Contents
At a glance
- Required or recommended? The CDC recommends it; no countries require it
- Where is it common? Africa, Asia, Americas (Haiti), the Pacific
- How is it transmitted? Through contaminated water and food
- Duration of protection: Three to six months
Cholera Vaccine Info
Ideally, 10 days
before departure
90%: 10 days after immunization
80%: Three months after immunization
protection
Three to six month
Tiredness
Headache
Abdominal pain
Nausea/vomiting
Diarrhea
Lack of appetite
Where It’s Most Common
Each year, about 2.9 million cholera cases and over 95,000 cholera-related deaths are reported worldwide.
Today, cholera
[3]
Cholera VIS
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/hcp/vis/vis-statements/cholera.html
is found in four regions: Africa, Asia, the Pacific, and the Americas. The countries within these regions that are affected by cholera are shown in the table below.
Africa
- Burundi
- Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Cameroon
- Somalia
- Mozambique
- Ethiopia
- Kenya
- Tanzania
- Malawi
- Uganda
- Nigeria
- Zambia
- Sudan
- zimbabwe
Asia
- Bangladesh
- India
- Yemen
Americas
- Haiti
Pacific
- Philippines
About Cholera
This section summarizes the most important facts about cholera.
Cholera Vaccination FAQ
Here are the questions our patients frequently ask about the cholera vaccination. [1] Vaccines https://www.cdc.gov/cholera/vaccines.html We’ve answered them based on 17 years of being the busiest travel clinic in Midtown Manhattan. Let’s dive in!