Dominican RepublicTraveler View
Travel Health Notices
There are no notices currently in effect for Dominican Republic.
Vaccines and Medicines
Check the vaccines and medicines list and visit your doctor at least a month before your trip to get vaccines or medicines you may need. If you or your doctor need help finding a location that provides certain vaccines or medicines, visit the Find a Clinic page.
Non-Vaccine-Preventable Diseases
Disease Name | Common ways the disease spreads | Advice | Clinical Guidance for Healthcare Providers |
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Avoid contaminated water |
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Leptospirosis |
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Avoid bug bites |
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Dengue |
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Leishmaniasis |
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Zika |
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Airborne & droplet |
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Hantavirus |
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Tuberculosis (TB) |
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Stay Healthy and Safe
Counsel your patients on actions they can take on their trip to stay healthy and safe.
Healthy Travel Packing List
Remind your patients to pack health and safety items. Use the Healthy Travel Packing List for Dominican Republic for a list of health-related items they should consider packing.
After Your Trip
If you are not feeling well after your trip, you may need to see a doctor. If you need help finding a travel medicine specialist, see Find a Clinic. Be sure to tell your doctor about your travel, including where you went and what you did on your trip. Also tell your doctor if you were bitten or scratched by an animal while traveling.
If your doctor prescribed antimalarial medicine for your trip, keep taking the rest of your pills after you return home. If you stop taking your medicine too soon, you could still get sick.
Malaria is always a serious disease and may be a deadly illness. If you become ill with a fever either while traveling in a malaria-risk area or after you return home (for up to 1 year), you should seek immediate medical attention and should tell the doctor about your travel history.
For more information on what to do if you are sick after your trip, see Getting Sick after Travel.
Map Disclaimer - The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on maps do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement are generally marked.