Recent signals
Foreign-ministry advisories
Practical guidance
What the disease sub-score covers
Brazil’s disease sub-score is 70/100 (moderate band). It combines endemic baseline (the diseases that are always present at some level) with acute outbreak signals from WHO Disease Outbreak News, CDC traveller notices, and ECDC bulletins. A drop in the sub-score typically reflects a fresh outbreak rather than a worsening baseline; the events feed above lists what is driving today’s number. Endemic risk is what your vaccinations and basic hygiene protect against; outbreak risk is what determines whether the trip itself should be reconsidered.
Food, water, and mosquitoes
The three traveller-illness vectors that account for most self-reported sickness: contaminated water (tap, ice cubes, salad washed in tap), undercooked food (especially shellfish and street meat), and mosquito-borne disease (dengue, chikungunya, malaria, Zika). The defensive rules are well established: bottled or filtered water only in higher-risk destinations, cooked food served hot, peel fruit yourself, and use DEET- or picaridin-based repellent in dengue-active areas at dawn and dusk. The Brazil vaccinations page lists which immunisations specifically reduce risk for this country.
If an outbreak is in the news
A new WHO Disease Outbreak News article triggers a drop in the sub-score within 24 hours of publication; the events feed shows the source. Read the WHO article rather than secondary coverage: outbreak severity often gets amplified in travel press relative to the agency’s actual assessment. The Field Manual guide When an outbreak hits a destination you’ve booked walks through the decision tree: when to cancel, when to push, when to alter the itinerary.
Related for Brazil
Long-form context
Brazil is a continent of its own and the safety picture is wildly heterogeneous across it. The standard tourist itineraries (Rio, São Paulo, Salvador, Foz do Iguaçu, Lençóis Maranhenses, the Pantanal) are operationally manageable with the right discipline; the urban-crime baseline is higher than the rest of Latin America but the risks travellers actually meet are well-documented and predictable. This guide unpacks the Rio favela boundary geography, the São Paulo “quicada” pattern, Carnival logistics, Amazon and Pantanal nature-travel rules, the yellow-fever vaccination map, and what is genuinely off-limits versus what merely looks risky in headlines.
Frequently asked about Brazil
Are there any active disease outbreaks in Brazil?
Brazil's disease sub-score is 70/100. Active outbreaks are listed in the recent-signals feed above, sourced from WHO Disease Outbreak News, CDC traveller notices, and ECDC bulletins. A drop in the sub-score typically reflects a fresh outbreak rather than a worsening baseline.
What diseases are common in Brazil?
Endemic disease patterns vary by region within Brazil. The three traveller-illness vectors that account for most reported sickness anywhere: contaminated water, undercooked food, and mosquito-borne disease (dengue, chikungunya, malaria, Zika depending on region). The vaccinations page lists which immunisations specifically reduce risk for this country.
Is the water safe to drink in Brazil?
Tap water safety varies by region and infrastructure. In most non-OECD destinations, default to bottled or filtered water for drinking, ice, and brushing teeth; salads washed in tap water carry the same risk. The country safety guide's healthcare chapter covers the specific destination assessment.