Updated: March 27, 2026
How to help your patients find Atovaquone/Proguanil in stock: A provider's guide
Author
Peter Daggett

Summarize with AI
- Helping Your Patients Find Atovaquone/Proguanil: A Provider's Guide
- Understanding the Availability Landscape
- Strategy 1: Prescribe Early and Generically
- Strategy 2: Direct Patients to Stock-Finding Tools
- Strategy 3: Choose the Right Pharmacy
- Strategy 4: Prepare Patients with Alternatives
- Strategy 5: Address Insurance and Cost Barriers
- Strategy 6: Build a Workflow for Travel Medicine
- Quick Reference: Atovaquone/Proguanil Prescribing
- The Bottom Line
A provider's guide to helping patients find Atovaquone/Proguanil in stock. Practical tools, prescribing strategies, and alternative approaches for 2026.
Helping Your Patients Find Atovaquone/Proguanil: A Provider's Guide
Your patient is heading to a malaria-endemic region and needs Atovaquone/Proguanil — but their pharmacy doesn't have it. As their prescriber, you're in a unique position to help them navigate this common frustration. This guide provides actionable strategies to improve fill rates, reduce delays, and ensure your patients are protected.
Understanding the Availability Landscape
Atovaquone/Proguanil (generic Malarone) is not in formal shortage as of 2026. The supply from manufacturers like Mylan, Teva, Cipla, Sun Pharma, Aurobindo, and Lupin remains stable at the national level. The problem is at the retail pharmacy level: many pharmacies don't routinely stock travel medications and need to order them per-prescription.
This creates a gap between prescribing and filling that can take 1-5 business days to close — a significant delay for patients with upcoming travel. For the latest on supply status, see our provider shortage update.
Strategy 1: Prescribe Early and Generically
The most impactful step you can take happens at the point of prescribing:
- Prescribe 4-6 weeks before travel — This gives maximum buffer for ordering, insurance processing, and potential switches
- Write for "Atovaquone/Proguanil" rather than "Malarone" — Generic prescribing allows any manufacturer's product, improving the chance that the pharmacy has at least one version in stock
- Include "DAW 0" or allow substitution — Ensure the pharmacist can fill with whatever generic is available
- Note the indication — Adding "malaria prophylaxis — travel date [date]" to the prescription or pharmacy notes communicates urgency
Strategy 2: Direct Patients to Stock-Finding Tools
Instead of having patients call pharmacy after pharmacy, point them to resources that show real-time stock availability:
MedFinder
MedFinder helps patients find pharmacies near them that have specific medications in stock. Share the link directly or display it in your patient materials.
Discount Coupon Platforms
GoodRx and SingleCare show both prices and pharmacy availability. For patients without insurance coverage for travel medications, these platforms can reduce the cost of generic Atovaquone/Proguanil from a retail price of $150-$170 to as low as $43-$70 for 30 tablets. More details in our patient savings provider guide.
Strategy 3: Choose the Right Pharmacy
Not all pharmacies are equally likely to stock Atovaquone/Proguanil. When e-prescribing, consider directing to:
- Large chain pharmacies — CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, and Costco have robust wholesale relationships and higher likelihood of stocking or quickly ordering antimalarials
- Pharmacies near international airports — These pharmacies see higher demand for travel medications and are more likely to carry them
- Hospital outpatient pharmacies — Especially those affiliated with travel or infectious disease clinics
- Specialty/compounding pharmacies — May have established supply chains for less common medications
If your practice is associated with a travel medicine clinic, consider whether on-site dispensing is feasible for high-demand medications.
Strategy 4: Prepare Patients with Alternatives
Proactively discuss alternatives during the initial consultation, so patients aren't caught off guard if Atovaquone/Proguanil is unavailable:
Doxycycline as First-Line Backup
Doxycycline is the most practical alternative:
- Available at essentially every pharmacy in the country
- Costs $10-$30 for a full prophylactic course
- Effective in all malaria-endemic regions
- Main trade-offs: photosensitivity, 4-week post-travel course, GI effects, not suitable for pregnant women or children under 8
Consider writing a contingency Doxycycline prescription at the same time as the Atovaquone/Proguanil prescription, with instructions for the patient to fill it only if Atovaquone/Proguanil is unavailable. Counsel them on the different dosing schedule.
Other Alternatives by Patient Profile
- Pregnant patients (2nd/3rd trimester): Mefloquine or Chloroquine (for sensitive areas)
- Patients preferring weekly dosing: Mefloquine (screen for psychiatric history) or Tafenoquine (requires G6PD testing)
- Travel to chloroquine-sensitive areas only: Chloroquine is effective and well-tolerated
For a full clinical comparison, see our alternatives guide.
Strategy 5: Address Insurance and Cost Barriers
Travel-related malaria prophylaxis is not always covered by insurance, which can surprise patients at the pharmacy counter. Be prepared to help:
- Inform patients upfront that their plan may not cover malaria prophylaxis and that they may need to pay out of pocket
- Recommend discount coupons — GoodRx (~$43), SingleCare (~$46), and other platforms can reduce generic Atovaquone/Proguanil to a fraction of retail price
- Mention Doxycycline as a budget option — At $10-$30, it eliminates cost as a barrier entirely
- Reference GSK's Patient Assistance Program — For uninsured patients who need brand Malarone, GSK's PAP (gskforyou.com) may provide medication at no cost to eligible patients
- Point to NeedyMeds and RxAssist — These databases list patient assistance programs and may help eligible patients access medication at reduced or no cost
Strategy 6: Build a Workflow for Travel Medicine
If your practice frequently prescribes antimalarials, consider standardizing your approach:
- Create a travel medicine checklist in your EHR that includes medication availability check as a step
- Maintain a list of pharmacies in your area known to stock antimalarials
- Set up standard after-visit instructions that include MedFinder and coupon platform links
- Use MedFinder for Providers to streamline the process of finding stock for patients
- Train staff to guide patients through the prescription-filling process, including what to do if the first pharmacy doesn't have stock
Quick Reference: Atovaquone/Proguanil Prescribing
- Prophylaxis dose (adults): 1 tablet (250/100 mg) PO daily — start 1-2 days before travel, continue during travel, continue 7 days after
- Treatment dose (adults): 4 tablets (1000/400 mg) PO daily for 3 days
- Take with food or milky drink to maximize absorption
- Contraindications: Severe renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min) for prophylaxis; hypersensitivity
- Key interactions: Rifampin, rifabutin (reduce atovaquone levels — avoid); warfarin (monitor INR); tetracycline (reduces atovaquone levels)
- Generic cost with coupon: ~$43-$70 for 30 tablets
For comprehensive drug information, see our guides on Atovaquone/Proguanil uses and dosage and drug interactions.
The Bottom Line
Helping patients find Atovaquone/Proguanil is as much about preparation and communication as it is about the medication itself. Prescribe early, prescribe generically, direct patients to MedFinder, and always have a backup plan ready. Your proactive guidance can make the difference between a patient who's protected and one who travels unprotected.
Frequently Asked Questions
Prescribe generically (not brand Malarone), allow substitution (DAW 0), e-prescribe to a large chain pharmacy or one near an international airport, and prescribe at least 4-6 weeks before travel. Including the travel date in prescription notes can also prompt faster pharmacy action.
Yes, especially during peak travel seasons. Consider writing a contingency Doxycycline prescription alongside Atovaquone/Proguanil, with clear patient instructions to only fill the Doxycycline if Atovaquone/Proguanil is unavailable. Counsel on the dosing differences — particularly the 4-week post-travel course for Doxycycline vs. 7 days for Atovaquone/Proguanil.
MedFinder (medfinder.com) is the best tool for real-time pharmacy stock checking. GoodRx and SingleCare also show pharmacy availability alongside pricing — useful since many insurance plans don't cover travel prophylaxis. Include these resources in your after-visit instructions.
Inform patients upfront that travel prophylaxis may not be covered. Recommend GoodRx or SingleCare coupons, which can reduce generic Atovaquone/Proguanil to ~$43-$70 for 30 tablets. For cost-sensitive patients, Doxycycline at $10-$30 per course is an excellent alternative. For uninsured patients, GSK's Patient Assistance Program (gskforyou.com) may provide Malarone at no cost.
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