Travel Health Guide · Emergency Series
Severe Allergic Reaction in Cabo — Anaphylaxis Recognition and Response
Severe allergic reactions can happen on vacation from foods you don’t normally eat, medications, insect stings or unknown triggers. Anaphylaxis is a medical emergency that requires immediate epinephrine and ER care.
Recognize anaphylaxis
Difficulty breathing, swelling of face/lips/tongue, tightness in throat, hives spreading, severe vomiting/diarrhea, rapid heartbeat, fainting, sense of doom. Often multiple symptoms together within minutes of exposure.
Use epinephrine immediately if available
If you carry an EpiPen (or generic auto-injector), use it at the first sign. Inject into outer thigh. Even through clothing is okay. After injection, call for emergency help — epinephrine works for ~15 minutes; you need ER backup.
If no EpiPen available
Call 911 and our 24/7 line. Note exposure (food, sting, etc.). Move patient to safety. Position upright if breathing trouble, lying down with legs up if fainting. Do not give anything by mouth if airway compromised.
At the hospital
IV epinephrine, antihistamines, steroids, breathing support if needed. Observation for biphasic reaction (recurrence 4-24 hours later). Sometimes admission.
After recovery
Identify trigger if possible. Get an EpiPen prescription for the rest of your trip and back home. Notify your travel insurance.
Real medical emergency in Cabo?
Our 24/7 bilingual team triages, treats, escalates and advocates. One call covers everything.
FAQ
Can I get an EpiPen in Mexico?
Yes — by prescription. Our doctor can prescribe; pharmacy delivery to your hotel.
How fast does anaphylaxis become dangerous?
Minutes. The wait-and-see approach is what kills.
What about food allergies in Cabo specifically?
Shellfish, peanut, tree-nut allergies particularly relevant. Communicate clearly at restaurants — written cards in Spanish help.
What about insect sting reactions?
Local hospitals handle these routinely. Same anaphylaxis protocol.
Should I get tested for allergies before traveling?
If you have any history, yes. Discuss with your home doctor.
Important medical note: This article is general information for travelers and is not medical advice. For an immediate life-threatening emergency in Mexico, call 911 first. For coordination of urgent care, hospital escalation, ground or air ambulance, or medical repatriation home to the USA or Canada, call our 24/7 bilingual line. Cabo Walk-In Clinic is COFEPRIS-licensed in Mexico; hospital and specialist care is delivered by an independent licensed hospital and its physicians. Travel-insurance reimbursement depends on your policy and your insurer’s review.