System overview
Laos has a small, under-resourced public system, with central hospitals in Vientiane (Mahosot, Mittaphab, Setthathirath), provincial hospitals and district facilities elsewhere. Quality and equipment are well below Western norms; specialist depth is thin even in Vientiane; English is limited [1,2]. No hospital in Laos holds full JCI accreditation. The US, UK and Australian embassies in Vientiane all advise that for any serious illness or injury, medical evacuation to Thailand is the standard pathway [3,4,5]. Anyone relocating to Laos in their 60s should treat international medical insurance with robust evacuation cover as non-negotiable.
Hospitals to know
Vientiane
- Kasemrad International Hospital Vientiane. The newest and largest private hospital in Laos, with cardiology, orthopaedics, paediatrics, obstetrics, dialysis, ophthalmology and 24-hour emergency. The best in-country option for routine and moderate care [6].
- French Medical Centre (Centre Médical Franco-Lao). Long-established expat clinic for primary care, vaccinations, dental and physiotherapy; also coordinates referrals to Thailand [6,5].
- Alliance International Medical Centre. Outpatient clinic widely used by the diplomatic and NGO community.
Across the border (Udon Thani, Thailand)
- AEK Udon International Hospital. Roughly two hours by road from Vientiane via the Friendship Bridge, JCI accredited; the destination most embassies recommend for anything beyond minor care [7,5].
Luang Prabang
- Provincial hospital and limited private clinics; serious cases are flown or driven to Vientiane or onward to Thailand [6].
The UK FCDO maintains a curated list of medical facilities and English-speaking practitioners in Laos [6].
Routine care and chronic disease management
You can handle day-to-day primary care for stable conditions in Vientiane through Kasemrad or the French Medical Centre. For 60+ chronic conditions:
- Basic antihypertensives (amlodipine, losartan, telmisartan), statins (atorvastatin, simvastatin), metformin and basal insulins are available, mostly as Indian or Thai generics. Do not assume brand consistency [6].
- Newer classes (SGLT2 inhibitors, GLP-1 agonists, DOACs) are inconsistently stocked. Many long-term residents source these in Udon Thani or Bangkok every three to six months.
- Plan specialist follow-up (cardiology, oncology, endocrinology, rheumatology) around regular trips to Udon Thani or Bangkok.
- Bring at least 90 days of medication on arrival, plus a clear written summary, recent labs and copies of imaging.
Pharmacy and personal medication
Pharmacies in Vientiane are functional, but supply chains are thin. Counterfeit risk is real outside the larger reputable outlets. Buy from pharmacies attached to Kasemrad or recommended by the French Medical Centre. Controlled substances (benzodiazepines, opioids, stimulants) are restricted. Importing them without proper documentation is high-risk. Carry original prescriptions and a doctor's letter, and bring only a reasonable personal supply [1,4].
Vaccinations
CDC recommends long-term residents in Laos be current on routine vaccines plus hepatitis A, hepatitis B and typhoid. Get the Japanese encephalitis vaccine for long stays. Get rabies pre-exposure vaccination. The country has widespread canine rabies and limited rural access to post-exposure care [8,9]. You need a yellow fever certificate only if arriving from a transmission country.
Endemic infectious risks
- Dengue is endemic, with annual case peaks from June to November and concentration in Vientiane Capital, Borikhamxay, Khammouane, Savannakhet and Champasak. Vientiane itself sees dengue every year [8].
- Malaria: there is no malaria risk in Vientiane city. Risk exists country-wide outside Vientiane, with the highest burden in Attapeu, Champasak, Khammouane, Salavan, Savannakhet and Sekong; use chemoprophylaxis for extended rural travel in those provinces. Multidrug-resistant strains are documented along the Thai and Cambodian borders [8].
- Rabies is endemic; treat any animal bite or scratch as urgent. Post-exposure rabies immunoglobulin can be hard to source in country; for a severe exposure, evacuation to Udon Thani is often the safest pathway [9].
- Cholera, typhoid, tuberculosis and viral hepatitis circulate at higher background rates than in Europe.
Water and food
Tap water in Laos is not safe to drink. Use boiled or bottled water, avoid ice except in chain hotels and reputable restaurants, and follow safe-food practices [8,4].
Air quality
Vientiane and northern Laos suffer severe seasonal haze from agricultural burning, typically February to April, with PM2.5 commonly multiples of the WHO guideline. The wet-season air (June to October) is markedly cleaner [2]. Use indoor HEPA filtration during burning season if you have cardiopulmonary disease.
Insurance
Laos has no functioning national health insurance for foreign residents. The two practical options are:
- A limited number of domestic private insurers offering local-only cover; useful for primary care, inadequate for anything serious.
- International private health insurance with strong emergency evacuation cover. Insurers commonly used by expats in Laos include Cigna Global, AXA Global Healthcare, Allianz Care, William Russell, Aetna International and IMG. For Laos specifically, confirm three things before signing: a 24/7 evacuation coordination line; that the policy covers ground evacuation to Udon Thani as well as air evacuation to Bangkok or Singapore; and that chronic conditions you already manage are explicitly covered.
Emergencies
Lao emergency numbers are 1623 for ambulance (variable in practice), 191 for police and 190 for fire; in Vientiane many expats simply call Kasemrad or the French Medical Centre directly. Public ambulance response is slow and the equipment basic [3,5]. For any major event, the working assumption is: stabilise in Vientiane, then evacuate to Udon Thani (by road, about two hours) or Bangkok (by air); confirm with your insurer in advance how this is coordinated.
This page is not medical advice. Consult a qualified clinician.