Start Your Trip Protected, Not Panicked
Getting travel vaccines sorted is rarely the fun part of planning a trip, but it can make a big difference to how relaxed you feel before you go. Once exams are over and flights from Brighton are booked, it is easy to focus on outfits and itineraries and leave health prep to the last minute. City breaks, backpacking routes, volunteering projects or visiting family abroad can all bring different health risks.
Planning ahead with travel vaccines helps you avoid stress, rushed decisions and limited appointment choices. Some vaccines need time to work, and some need more than one dose. This guide walks you through a simple checklist so you can arrive at a Brighton pharmacy appointment calm, prepared and ready to get the right protection for your trip.
Know Your Timelines Before You Book
Good timing is one of the most useful parts of travel health planning. If you can, aim to start thinking about travel vaccines as soon as your trip dates are fairly fixed.
As a general guide, try to:
- Start planning 6 to 8 weeks before you go
- Book an appointment at least 4 weeks before departure
- Leave extra time if you may need several doses
Some vaccines, like courses for hepatitis A and B or rabies, may need multiple visits. Others, like many typhoid vaccines, are often single doses that can be given closer to travel. However, when you leave everything late, appointment slots can be limited, especially from spring into early summer when lots of students and staff leave Brighton at the same time.
If your trip is sooner than that, do not skip advice. Even if you are travelling in less than 2 weeks, it is still worth speaking to a pharmacist. You may still have time for some protection, and you can also talk about:
- Bite avoidance for mosquitoes and other insects
- Food and water hygiene tips
- Whether malaria tablets are advised for your route
If time is short, the pharmacist may focus on the highest priorities for your destination and plans. They can also look at follow-up doses that might be needed once you are home.
For those based on or near the University of Sussex campus, a local travel vaccination clinic offers the advantage of appointments that can fit around lectures, lab sessions or work shifts. When you book by phone or online, have your travel dates and destinations ready so your appointment can be planned in the right time frame.
Gather Your Medical Details and Vaccination Records
Arriving with good information helps the pharmacist give you clear and safe advice. It also cuts down on guesswork and repeat visits.
Useful vaccine records to bring include:
- Your NHS App or printed NHS vaccination summary
- Any childhood vaccination booklets you still have
- Yellow fever certificates from past trips
- Old travel clinic record cards or booklets
- Documents from GPs or clinics abroad, if you studied or lived overseas
Knowing which travel vaccines you have already had, and when you had them, helps avoid duplicate doses and makes sure boosters are given at the right time.
It also helps to bring key health information. Make a simple list that includes:
- All regular medicines, such as inhalers, contraceptive pills, HIV treatment, immunosuppressants or tablets from a hospital specialist
- Over the counter medicines or herbal products you take often
- Long term conditions, for example, asthma, diabetes, epilepsy, inflammatory bowel disease or ongoing mental health conditions
- Any history of weak immunity, including removal of the spleen
Allergies are very important to mention. Tell the pharmacist if you have had reactions to:
- Previous injections or vaccines
- Eggs, antibiotics, gelatine, yeast or latex
- Any serious, unexplained reaction after a medicine
Students and staff may also have a few extra points to think about. Let the pharmacist know if you are pregnant, breastfeeding or planning a pregnancy, as some live vaccines are not advised. Those who live in halls or shared houses may have had recent meningitis or MMR vaccines, so confirming these can help shape what is still needed and what is already covered.
Research Your Destination’s Health and Entry Rules
Before your appointment, it helps to spend a little time looking at your route. Country-specific travel health sites and foreign travel advice pages can give a useful starting point for the main risks and any travel warnings.
When you make notes, include:
- Every country you will enter, even for short stopovers
- Different regions within the same country, such as coast, cities or rural areas
- Any long bus, train or overland sections where you may be far from medical care
There is a difference between vaccines that are needed for entry and those that are strongly advised for your own safety. Some countries may ask for proof of vaccination, for example a yellow fever certificate for entry from certain areas, or evidence of a recent polio booster in a small number of cases. Others may not require anything at the border, but vaccines like hepatitis A or typhoid are still widely advised based on local food and water risks.
Rules and recommendations can change after outbreaks or new health concerns, so make sure you are looking at current guidance for your planned dates.
Your plans on the ground matter too. Think about:
- Whether you will be backpacking, volunteering or staying with local friends and family
- How rural your accommodation will be and whether there will be animals nearby
- Activities such as safaris, cycling, caving, festivals or working with animals
Also note how long you will be away and whether you are likely to eat mainly local street food, cook for yourself or eat in hotels. All these details help the pharmacist judge your risk of insect bites, animal bites and food- or water-related illness.
Plan Practicalities: Costs, Comfort and Extra Protection
Travel health needs to fit into your real life plans, including your budget and how you feel about injections. Some vaccines are provided privately rather than through NHS services, and prices can differ between providers. Before your appointment, it can be helpful to:
- Check which vaccines you might need based on your destination
- Think about how many different trips you are likely to take in the next few years
- Include travel health costs when you plan your overall trip budget
On the day, a bit of preparation makes things smoother. Try to:
- Wear a loose top or short sleeves so your upper arm is easy to reach
- Bring a bottle of water and a small snack, especially if you may have several injections
- Arrive a little early so forms can be completed without rushing
- Have any ID, your NHS number if you know it, and your vaccine records ready
A good travel vaccine appointment is also about more than injections. Pharmacists can usually advise on:
- Malaria prevention tablets, if these are suitable for your route
- Insect repellents and treated nets for bite avoidance
- Simple diarrhoea and rehydration kits
- Water purification options for areas with limited clean supply
If you have an ongoing condition, you may need extra planning for medicine storage and time zones. People who use inhalers, insulin or other regular medicines can talk through spare supplies, written medication lists and how to carry medicines and devices safely across borders.
Book Your Brighton Travel Vaccine Visit with Confidence
A little preparation before your appointment can save a lot of worry later. If you remember four key steps, you are already doing well: think about your timelines, gather your vaccine records and health details, research your destinations and route, and plan the simple practical bits like clothing and documents for the day.
By coming prepared, you give the pharmacist a clear picture of where you are going, what you are doing and any health issues that need extra care. That makes it easier to tailor travel vaccines, malaria advice and general health tips to your trip, whether you are heading off from the University of Sussex campus, working in Brighton or living nearby as a local resident.
Protect Your Trip With Expert Travel Vaccination Support
Wherever you are heading, we can help you stay protected with the right travel vaccines tailored to your destination and health needs. At Sussex University Pharmacy, our experienced team will guide you through what is recommended and when to have each vaccine for maximum protection. Book your appointment today or contact us if you would like advice before you travel.