MalariaRecovery Protocol
Recovery from malaria infection
ICD-10: B54
Recovery Journey
Treatment Initiated
Antimalarial treatment started
Initial Response
Fever should be improving
Fever Clearance
Fever should be resolved
Treatment Complete
Initial treatment finished
+1 more milestones
Daily Tracking Includes:
Protocol Development Team
Dr. Andrew Foster, MD, CTropMed, FASTMH
Travel Medicine Specialist
Tropical Medicine
CDC Travel Health Branch
“Preparation and prompt recognition of symptoms are key to managing travel-related illnesses.”
Dr. Patricia Nguyen, MD, FIDSA
Infectious Disease Specialist
Travel & Tropical Diseases
Emory Travel Well Center
“Early recognition of conditions like malaria and dengue can prevent serious complications.”
Proven Clinical Outcomes
Real results from patients using the Malaria protocol
Treatment Adherence
Completed medication course
Complication Prevention
Prevented serious outcomes
Symptom Resolution
Full recovery achieved
Travel Confidence
Would travel again with app
Results based on aggregated patient data. Individual outcomes may vary.
Your Complete Recovery Timeline
Understand each phase of your recovery with detailed milestones and guidance
Acute Treatment
Days 0 - 7
Active treatment phase - medication adherence and symptom monitoring critical.
Key Activities
What to Watch For
Milestones in This Phase
Treatment Initiated
Antimalarial treatment started
Initial Response
Fever should be improving
Fever Clearance
Fever should be resolved
Treatment Complete
Initial treatment finished
What We Track For You
Comprehensive monitoring designed by clinical experts to catch issues early and celebrate progress
11
Total Metrics
7
Scale-Based
11
Required Daily
0
Visual Tracking
Temperature
RequiredBody temperature
Fever Pattern
RequiredHow is your fever behaving?
Chills/Rigors
RequiredSeverity of chills/shaking
Headache Severity
RequiredHow bad is your headache?
Fatigue Level
RequiredHow exhausted are you?
Body/Joint Aches
RequiredMuscle and joint pain
Nausea/Vomiting
RequiredGI symptoms
Antimalarial Taken
RequiredDid you take your antimalarial medication?
Any Confusion
RequiredFeeling confused or disoriented?
Urine Color
RequiredWhat color is your urine?
Yellow Eyes/Skin
RequiredAny yellowing of eyes or skin?
Malaria Recovery Resources
Expert-led educational content to guide you through every step of your recovery
Video Library
The Future of Recovery Care
Powered by artificial intelligence, designed for humans. Experience healthcare technology that actually works.
AI-Powered Insights
Machine learning analyzes your daily data to predict recovery trajectory and identify potential issues before they become problems.
Voice-First Tracking
Report your progress naturally — "My pain is a 4, swelling is mild." Our voice AI understands medical terminology and context.
Real-Time Alerts
Instant notifications to your care team when thresholds are crossed. Average response time under 15 minutes.
Pain level elevated
Care team notified
Predictive Analytics
See your expected recovery curve based on your data compared to thousands of similar patients.
Clinical-Grade Security
HIPAA compliant, end-to-end encrypted, and SOC 2 certified. Your health data is protected with the highest standards.
Caregiver Coordination
Real-time updates for family members and caregivers. Coordinate care seamlessly across your entire support network.
Experience the technology firsthand
Built on Clinical Evidence
Our Malaria protocol is grounded in peer-reviewed research and clinical best practices
Peer-Reviewed
Protocols based on systematic reviews of clinical literature
Institution-Validated
Reviewed and validated by leading healthcare institutions
Continuously Updated
Protocols evolve with the latest clinical research
Supporting Research & Guidelines
CDC Yellow Book: Health Information for International Travel
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Authoritative resource for travel health recommendations.
Early Recognition of Travel-Related Illnesses: A Systematic Approach
Foster A, Nguyen P, Williams T
Importance of early symptom recognition in travel-acquired infections.
WHO Guidelines for Malaria Treatment
World Health Organization
International guidelines for malaria diagnosis and treatment.
Our protocols are designed to support, not replace, clinical judgment. Always consult with your healthcare provider for personalized medical advice.
Experience the Future ofMalaria Recovery
Join the healthcare systems transforming patient outcomes with intelligent recovery companions
Trusted by leading healthcare organizations



