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Backing Borderdawn all the way on this one! Vets have had the results of this study for YEARS, but continue to ignore it... Also pet insurance/ kennels should also change policy on vacs. Every three years is more than enough... I have witnessed LOTS of cats/dogs dying within 24 hours of having their first booster a year after initial vacs... Its really damned if you do vac and damned if you don't... Unfortunately it a gamble |
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Boarding kennels abide by manufacturers guidelines, so if they say every third year then thats perfectly acceptable by us. Yearly boosters are still done but not for everything. |
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No, I do the puppy/kitten jabs and I did do a booster after that then draw the line but with Star I'm not going to and Anakin i'm not going to booster him. I got the letter through a few weeks ago saying Anakin needed his booster so that vet is still doing them yearly too. Another thing that does my nut in, vets trying to get an adult dog who hasn't been vacc'd or has no proof of it, given a double set of puppy jabs! The double set for babies I believe is to overpower the natural immunity they already had from their mother which lasts up to 12 weeks anyway, that's why they are given 2 sets, an adult doesn't need that whether it's been jabbed before or not, an adult should never be given a double dose. Scam scam scam. Our original vet also said they wouldn't spay/neuter an animal that hadn't been jabbed and wasn't up to date on jabs as apparently it was too dangerous for the animal! So who is that helping then? I had a pal who's weim suffered auto immune disease from over vaccination and she eventually died after much suffering, painful blisters all over her skin, basically bit by bit her body started attacking itself and throughout it all the vet STILL advised she was boostered yearly. Luckily she was better advised elsewhere and the dog did feel better after a couple of booster free years although unfortunately it was too late and too much damage had been done. |
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Very hard to watch on a daily basis... |
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Its so important to have cats neutered, and they are just putting more barriers up! Though, there is a SMALL risk that unvac'd cat could catch cat flu/enteritis when in vets getting spayed, thats the reasoning behind it. But care on the vets/nurses part can help minimise this! |
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