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Travel medicine: Costs, Recovery, Stats & What to Expect — A Infectious Disease Guide

February 15, 2026 · by the Help Me Find A Doctor editorial team

Illustrative photograph for Travel medicine: Costs, Recovery, Stats & What to Expect — A Infectious Disease Guide

Everything patients ask about travel medicine — how it works, who it's for, typical recovery, costs, risks, and how to choose the right infectious disease specialist. Pre-travel vaccines, malaria prophylaxis, and post-travel illness.

Complex infections, travel medicine, and antimicrobial stewardship. Below: the procedures patients ask about most, the numbers that put the field in context, and the questions worth raising at a first consultation with a infectious disease specialist.

Top procedures & treatments

  • Travel medicine

    Pre-travel vaccines, malaria prophylaxis, and post-travel illness.

  • Complex antibiotic management

    OPAT (outpatient parenteral antibiotic therapy) and stewardship.

  • HIV care and PrEP

    Modern single-tablet regimens and long-acting injectables.

  • Tuberculosis evaluation and treatment

    Latent and active TB care.

  • Post-COVID and long-COVID care

    Multidisciplinary management of post-acute sequelae.

By the numbers

  • ~1.2 million people live with HIV in the U.S.; modern therapy yields near-normal lifespan.
  • Antimicrobial resistance contributes to 1+ million global deaths per year.
  • PrEP reduces HIV acquisition risk by 99% when taken as prescribed.

How to choose the right specialist

Verify board certification, ask how many of your specific procedure the clinician performs each year, and review patient outcomes — not just star ratings. A infectious disease provider who clearly explains your options, the evidence, and the realistic recovery timeline is worth more than the most heavily advertised name.

Use our directory to filter infectious disease specialists by city, then bring this article (and the FAQ below) to your consultation.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need an ID doctor for a UTI or sinus infection?

Generally no — ID specializes in complex, refractory, or unusual infections.

Is PrEP for me?

PrEP is appropriate for anyone with elevated HIV risk; eligibility is determined in a brief screening visit.

Topics covered

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