Queens
Astoria
37-15 23rd Ave, Astoria, NY 11105
A western Queens clinic for flu shots, COVID vaccines, Tdap boosters, MMR, varicella, and same-day vaccine planning close to home.
View location details View listed inventoryJapanese encephalitis vaccine questions usually come up when an Asia itinerary gets more specific. The traveler realizes the trip may be longer than expected, includes rural or outdoor evening exposure, or starts too soon for a routine two-dose plan. Nao Medical helps patients sort out the practical next step locally.
CDC guidance says Japanese encephalitis risk depends heavily on trip length, season, mosquito exposure, and whether the trip reaches rural settings.
Brief travel limited to major urban areas is usually a different risk conversation than a longer itinerary with repeated outdoor exposure.
Japanese encephalitis vaccine usually depends on a two-dose schedule, which is why earlier planning matters.
Japanese encephalitis requests are more itinerary-sensitive and stock-sensitive than routine boosters, so confirm the workflow before arriving.
CDC guidance separates Japanese encephalitis from routine travel vaccines because the risk varies so much by itinerary.
CDC recommends Japanese encephalitis vaccine for travelers moving to endemic areas, frequent travelers, and many travelers spending a month or more in areas where the virus occurs.
Even trips under a month can raise Japanese encephalitis questions when travelers expect rural time, heavy mosquito exposure, or repeated outdoor evening activity.
CDC says shorter-term trips limited to major urban areas are usually minimal risk, which is why the itinerary details matter so much.
Country list, dates, season, city versus rural stops, and hotel versus field conditions all help clarify whether Japanese encephalitis should stay on the table.
Japanese encephalitis planning gets harder when the trip is already close, but timing questions still have real answers.
CDC says the primary Japanese encephalitis series should be completed at least 1 week before travel.
CDC says IXIARO can be used on an accelerated schedule for adults ages 18 to 65 when last-minute travel still creates meaningful risk.
If timing does not allow a full plan, strict mosquito-bite prevention still matters because vaccine timing and protection may be incomplete.
Last-minute travel is exactly when itinerary review and clinic-specific confirmation matter most for Japanese encephalitis.
Patients usually want the closest clinic that can handle the timing question without adding another travel-clinic commute.
StuyTown gives Manhattan travelers an in-city starting point when a Japanese encephalitis question needs to be sorted out before departure.
Williamsburg, Crown Heights, Astoria, Long Island City, Jackson Heights, and Jamaica help much of Brooklyn and Queens stay local while confirming the next step.
Bartow Mall, East 174th Street, Hicksville, and Mineola give Bronx and Long Island travelers closer travel-vaccine access.
Choose the location that best fits the day, then call ahead if the trip depends on Japanese encephalitis timing or same-week scheduling.
Choose the clinic that fits the day, then call ahead only if the visit depends on a specific brand, a travel vaccine, or a timing-sensitive follow-up dose.
Queens
37-15 23rd Ave, Astoria, NY 11105
A western Queens clinic for flu shots, COVID vaccines, Tdap boosters, MMR, varicella, and same-day vaccine planning close to home.
View location details View listed inventory
Queens
30-07 36th Ave, Astoria, NY 11106
A practical LIC and western Queens option for vaccine visits that need to fit around work, school, or commuting.
View location details View listed inventory
Brooklyn
308 Graham Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11211
A lead Brooklyn clinic for flu shots, COVID vaccines, Tdap boosters, and follow-up on school, work, or travel vaccine questions.
View location details View listed inventory
Brooklyn
341 Eastern Pkwy, Brooklyn, NY 11216
A central Brooklyn vaccine clinic for common boosters, MMR and varicella questions, flu shots, and same-day immunization planning.
View location details View listed inventory
Queens
80-10 Northern Blvd, Jackson Heights, NY 11372
A central Queens option for walk-in vaccine visits, adult boosters, and documentation needs that cannot wait weeks.
View location details View listed inventory
Queens
90-18 Sutphin Blvd, Jamaica, NY 11435
A southeast Queens clinic for vaccine visits tied to school, work, travel, or same-day booster needs.
View location details View listed inventory
Manhattan
259 1st Ave, New York, NY 10003
The Manhattan anchor for in-city vaccine access, including flu shots, COVID vaccines, shingles shots, and adult booster planning.
View location details View listed inventory
Bronx
2063A Bartow Ave, Bronx, NY 10475
A Bronx vaccine clinic for flu, COVID, Tdap, MMR, shingles, and common adult immunization follow-up.
View location details View listed inventory
Long Island
232 W Old Country Rd, Hicksville, NY 11801
A Nassau County option for routine flu shots, shingles vaccines, COVID boosters, MMR, varicella, and same-day vaccine questions.
View location details View listed inventory
Long Island
135 Mineola Blvd, Mineola, NY 11501
A high-priority Long Island clinic for adult boosters, shingles shots, flu shots, COVID vaccines, and repeat-dose planning.
View location details View listed inventory
Bronx
932 E 174th St, Bronx, NY 10460
A second Bronx vaccine option for same-day flu shots, COVID vaccines, Tdap boosters, and adult immunization planning.
View location details View listed inventoryCoverage and stock can both change. Bring any record you already have, and call the clinic if the visit depends on a specific brand, a second dose, a travel deadline, or an age-based formulation.
Additional listed vaccine inventory can include DTaP (Daptacel), Hep A, Twinrix, adult Hep B (Recombivax HB), HPV9 (Gardasil 9), IPV (IPOL), Menveo, Bexsero, MMR (Priorix), Prevnar 20, Pneumovax 23, RSV (Abrysvo), Tdap (Boostrix), Varicella (Varivax), and Zoster (Shingrix), depending on clinic stock. Travel vaccine requests such as typhoid, yellow fever, and Japanese encephalitis can also be part of the current clinic inventory, but those are the most likely to need advance confirmation.
If you want to compare listed vaccine categories across the network first, review vaccines by location.
Start with the main vaccine page for same-day booking, insurance questions, and the full clinic footprint across NYC and Long Island.
Compare the listed vaccine categories across all active clinics before choosing the location that fits your day.
Plan travel vaccines, itinerary-driven timing, and departure deadlines with a local clinic network instead of a one-off travel-clinic search.
Review yellow fever vaccine timing, itinerary questions, and travel-documentation planning before an international trip.
Review the visit-fee, vaccine-fee, insurance, and self-pay questions that most often affect yellow fever cost in NYC.
Understand yellow card and ICVP timing, prior-record questions, and what to confirm before international travel.
Review flu shot timing, age-based formulation questions, and where to book a same-day seasonal vaccine visit.
See current COVID vaccine visit guidance, brand questions, and how to book a local booster appointment.
Review 10-year boosters, wound-related tetanus questions, pregnancy-related Tdap timing, and school or work forms.
Check shingles vaccine eligibility, second-dose timing, and Shingrix scheduling across the active clinics.
Review MMR record gaps, school and work documentation questions, and measles-mumps-rubella vaccine planning.
Handle chickenpox vaccine questions, proof-of-immunity follow-up, and varicella booking without chasing multiple sites.
Choose the clinic that best fits the day, bring any outside vaccine record or form you already have, and call ahead if this visit depends on a specific brand or follow-up dose.
Book an Appointment