It’s 2 a.m. in the ED. The waiting room is full, and the next patient sounds straightforward: fever. Then they add, “I just got back from an international trip.”
That one sentence should make you pause, because fever in a returning traveler isn’t just another viral syndrome. It’s a different diagnostic pathway, and how you approach it starts (and often succeeds) with a strong history and physical.
It’s easy to get overwhelmed by the sheer number of possible diagnoses: malaria, dengue, typhoid, and more. The key is knowing how to narrow the list rather than memorizing all of them.
That starts with your most valuable tool: A detailed travel history.
Start with geography, but don’t stop at the country name. Regions within countries matter, and so do layovers. A patient who spent hours in an airport in a malaria-endemic region may still have relevant exposure. These details anchor your differential to real epidemiology rather than guesswork.
Ask:
This is where the history becomes essential. A resort stay, a medical mission trip, and backpacking through rural villages are completely different exposure profiles. The goal is to understand risk behaviors, not just destinations.
Ask:
Food and water histories still matter here.
Ask:
This is a commonly missed piece, and often more nuanced than it seems.
Ask not just if they took precautions, but how well they followed through:
Patients will often say “yes” to prophylaxis, but may have only taken part of the course. That detail matters.
Once you have the history, your physical exam should be targeted. This keeps your exam focused and clinically meaningful.
A helpful framework is thinking in “fever plus” categories:
Then look intentionally for:
Almost half of returning travelers with fever never receive a definitive diagnosis. And most still do well.
Your role in the ED isn’t to name every pathogen. It’s to:
Fever in the returning traveler can feel overwhelming, but it doesn’t have to be.
When you anchor yourself in a thoughtful history and a targeted physical exam, the chaos becomes structured. The differential becomes manageable. And the patient in front of you becomes a little less intimidating.
In a world of advanced diagnostics, this is a good reminder: the most powerful tools you have are still the ones you bring into the room.