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Vaccinations...Too Many, Too Often?
Vaccinations, vaccinations, vaccinations. Dog and cat
owners have been told by veterinarians and pet health care providers for years
that annual vaccinations for Rabies, Distemper, Parvovirus, Feline Leukemia and
on and on...are required yearly. Annual vaccinations, also called annual
boosters, have certainly played a major role in disease prevention in dogs and
cats. Nevertheless, the question recently on the the minds of dog and cat
owners has been... Do these vaccines have to be given every year?
And a second and equally important questions is... are we vaccinating
dogs and cats too much? Are we actually causing harm by over-vaccinating
our pets?
UPDATE! The American
Association of Feline Practitioners has recently released a suggested Protocol
for veterinarians to consider when vaccinating cats for various diseases.
Visit the AAFP website to see the 29 page report.
This article
was developed to shed light on these questions of vaccine use. Times are
changing and vaccine protocols are changing. But are we being swayed by
unproved theories or are our decisions being made based on scientific and
statistical evidence? After reading this article on vaccinations in dogs and
cats, you, the dog and cat's health care provider, will be better equipped to
answer the question: Vaccinations...Too Many, Too Often?
Vaccinations: Too Many, Too
Often?
Nothing
is sacred. Nothing stays the same. And so it is regarding the present state of
affairs in the swirling waters of the pet vaccination world. There are a number
of questions that could and should be asked before you allow your dog or cat to
be vaccinated. Unfortunately, the answers to your questions will probably be
determined not by firmly set scientific standards or universally accepted protocols
but rather by the judgment and biases of the person you ask!
There are two
major questions that beg for exact answers:
1.) Are
multiple agent (multivalent ) vaccines "overloading" the pets immune
system?
2.) Are "annual vaccinations" really necessary annually?
Not only are
dog and cat owners beginning to ask about the safety and necessity of annual,
multivalent vaccines for their pets but the entire veterinary profession is in
a state of critical self-examination. From the highly technical research and
development laboratories in the giant pharmaceutical corporations right on down
to the solo practitioner operating a mobile clinic, the veterinary health care
providers are asking:
Too many?
Too often?
In an attempt
to gather research for this article and to help clear the waters of disparate
directives on the vaccination topic, my consensus is that nobody really knows
how many or how often! So if the trained professionals disagree whether or not
"Laddie" should get a seven-in-one vaccination, plus a Rabies
inoculation, and that this schedule should be repeated yearly, how are you as
"Laddie's" owner to know what to do?
Let’s take a
swim through these turbulent waters and try to make some sense of what is fact
and what is conjecture. Discussing the first question of multivalent vaccines
and whether or not they are "stressing The Immune System we need to know a
little about how an individual (human, dog, cat, mouse ... mammals are quite
similar in their defense mechanisms against disease) responds to a pathogen. A
pathogen is any agent such as a virus or bacteria or poison that harms the
individual. Every minute of every day all individuals are being silently
attacked by pathogens from the air, food, water, and contents of our own
intestinal tracts. The true miracle is that any of us survive at all!
Through eons of
evolutionary trial and error, those species who best defended against pathogens
were able to produce similar offspring who were also immune competent, that is,
able to fend off those harmful invaders. So we can safely state that, in
general, those individuals alive today have healthy Immune Systems, otherwise
all those nasty pathogens would have their way with us in short order! But some
experts believe the overall state of health in many of the earth's creatures is
declining, and that vaccinations are actually contributing to the demise of our
immune systems.
The
Immune System ... everybody throws this term around with reckless abandon and
often the term is totally misunderstood. Here is what you really need to know
about The Immune System if you are to have any calm water to swim through in
this sea of controversy surrounding vaccination protocols:
The
Immune System is really a general term for all of the body's pathogen defense
mechanisms. The Immune System is not a single, discrete
system, after all. There are a multitude of biochemical and anatomical factors
that make up The Immune System but only three aspects that we
will refer to in this article. These three active barriers to disease that play
a major role in vaccination-induced immunity are the following:
1.) MUCOSAL IMMUNITY ... takes place in the
thin mucous lining of the mammary, respiratory, urinary, and digestive tracts.
This important barrier to disease often is the first line of defense against
viruses and bacteria and the ammunition used against invaders is called
"secretary IgA" antibody. This complex protein molecule binds up
invaders and prevents their entrance into the body. Vaccine technology has
taken advantage of this line of defense through the implementation of
intranasal and oral vaccines. Much more emphasis will be placed on MUCOSAL
IMMUNITY in the future since there is increasing evidence that human
and animal populations are experiencing a measurable decline in IgA immune proteins.
Just what is triggering the decline in IgA levels and what role vaccinations
may play in this scheme is as yet unknown.
2.) CELL-MEDIATED
IMMUNITY ... this refers to individual body cells that have learned by
past experience (exposure) what foreign invaders look like and recognizes the
invaders whenever they show up again! So when a cell is exposed to an
invader such as Parvovirus, the cell recognizes the virus as an invader and
mounts a response by manufacturing immune proteins. If the strength and numbers
of the virus attack don't kill the cell, the cell is now educated as to what
Parvoviruses look like and becomes better equipped to defend itself from future
Parvovirus attacks.
Natural
exposure as well as vaccine products which "look like" a natural
pathogen but don't present a threat to the cell can induce the cell to remember
what the foreign invaders look like. A healthy cell is then prepared to fend
off future attacks.
There are lots
of body cells whose main job is to fight off disease. Plus, every cell in the
body that has a special function... let's say a liver cell that has to store
glycogen, make cholesterol, convert protein into building material, plus
regulate numerous other chemical reactions...still has the ability to recognize
an invader and fight for its life! For the most part, specialized white blood
cells play a major role in CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNITY.
|
"A BOOSTER SHOT"...what does that
mean? When an animal or human is vaccinated they generally will develop
a response to the vaccine by increasing their level of protective defense
immunity. This level may be high, low, or none. Usually there is
a measurable response indicating some protection. If a second
vaccine for the same disease is given at a later time...this second vaccine
will BOOST the protective levels of immunity that were induced by the first
vaccine. So, whether the vaccine is for Rabies or Parvovirus or Feline
Leukemia, it might be called a "BOOSTER SHOT" if it is given
sometime after an original vaccination. |
3.) HUMORAL
IMMUNITY ... works from the body's fluid sources, the blood and lymph.
This is where we test for a dog or cat's immune levels (called antibody titers)
so that we can get an estimate of how well the body can recognize an invader.
If the body has had a previous encounter with a pathogen, just like with CELL-MEDIATED
IMMUNITY), the body makes "Opposite Invaders" to circulate
in body fluids. The "Opposite Invaders" are called antibodies. These
molecules attach to or otherwise disable invaders and prevent them from doing
harm to the body. And just like with CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNITY,
it is safer for the body to learn to recognize an invader from a crippled or
fake invader than to risk learning from an actual natural attack.
There are many
other ways a "home-body" wards off disease, but these three major
Immune System divisions working together carry the brunt of responsibility for
defense against pathogens. Remember that there are no simple blood tests for CELL-MEDIATED
IMMUNITY, it can be assessed but it is difficult and expensive to
measure.
And each
individual is unique as to how tough this line of defense is. HUMORAL
IMMUNITY, however, can be measured by checking the levels of
circulating "Opposite Invaders" that we call antibodies. Our ability
to say that a dog or cat is protected from a disease based solely upon checking
for high antibody titers is precarious ... but, from a practical standpoint,
it's all we've got! It is very important to keep in mind that we can only
assume what titer levels are protective and what levels are not. Antibody titer
tests are not absolutely predictive of the individual's ability to fend off
disease but rather simply indicate the strength of the immune system's memory
of previous exposure to a specific pathogen. So if your dog has a high titer to
the Rabies virus...does that mean that if exposed to the virus the dog will
absolutely not get the disease? No one can say absolutely not...we can
only sat probably not.
Now
that we have a better understanding of what The Immune System refers to and
with the knowledge that we can test part of it, we can ask certain questions.
The first one is...
"Are multiple agent vaccines overloading The
Immune System?" With your knowledge that every individual
is continuously being challenged by invaders, it seems unlikely that
"ganging up" on The Immune System is even possible.
In fact there is overwhelming scientific evidence that a healthy body can
respond with immune defenses to multiple challenges and can make protective
levels of antibodies to a number of pathogens at the same time! Remember ...
we're talking about normal and healthy individuals here! All bets are off if we
are talking about severely stressed or presently sick individuals. Could
it be that the dogs and cats that may have had an adverse reaction to a
vaccination were outwardly healthy, but in truth were suffering from a
pre-existing, undetected disorder? With twenty-seven years of experience
in immunology, Robert Snyder, a Public Health Advisor at the Centers For
Disease Control, has stated that there is "evidence that the more you
stimulate The Immune System the better it works." This
statement may very well be true, unless there is an overwhelming number and
virulence of pathogens.
On the other
hand there are knowledgeable individuals who would strongly disagree.
Veterinarian Christina Chambreau, an holistic practitioner from Sparks,
Maryland states that there are "all kinds of problems with vaccinations
and they are probably the worst thing that we do for our animals".
Her belief is that by injecting vaccine into an animal we are effectively
by-passing the body's normal lines of defenses and presenting to the animal
foreign material in an unnatural manner. Repetitive vaccinations, she contends,
rather than providing extra assurance that an animal will mount high levels of
antibodies, actually has an adverse effect on the animal's overall ability to
achieve a healthy balance within its disease fighting talents.
If I, as a
small animal practitioner with twenty-eight years of experience, have a hard
time reconciling these widely different viewpoints, how is the pet owner to
make sense of the present state of affairs? And just to underscore the lack of
uniformity of opinion regarding multivalent vaccines, I sent questionnaires to
over twenty veterinarians including Dr. Carvel Tiekert, Executive Director of
the American Holistic Veterinary Medical Association, seeking evidence that
"too many" vaccines were causing harm to our pets. Not a single
person I queried would offer any irrefutable evidence that the multivalent
vaccines actually harmed pets. There are stories, there are opinions, there are
theories, there is conjecture ... even suggestions that veterinarians are
knowingly using all those vaccines to further their financial gains! (On this
point, you should know that giving a pet a single dose of a single vaccine,
then giving subsequent single dose vaccines for different diseases spread out
over a period of time could be more expensive for the pet owner and more
revenue for the veterinarian than giving a multivalent vaccine.)
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Multivalent vaccines are those that
have more than one antigen A typical multivalent vaccine is the
DHLPPCv vaccine for dogs. Instead of giving six
different injections, all these "vaccines" or antigens can be given
in a single small volume injection. Certainly this is easier on the dog
than getting six separate injections. DHLPPCv stands for: D... Canine Distemper
Virus...a dangerous viral infection. "Distemper" is an odd
name for a viral infection and this disease has no relationship to nor
connection with a dog's temperament. H... Hepatitis...a viral
infection caused by two related viruses that mainly affects the liver. L... Leptospirosis...a
bacterial infection affecting the kidneys. This class of bacteria can
infect humans, cows, dogs, pigs and other mammals. P... Parainfluenza...a
virus that along with the Hepatitis virus can cause upper respiratory
infections. P... Parvovirus...a
severe and often fatal virus affecting the lining of the intestinal tract. Cv... Coronavirus...is
very similar to the Parvovirus, can be very severe, but has a somewhat
different effect on the intestinal tract and generally is not fatal. |
If you choose
to believe that multivalent vaccines (such as the DHLPPCv so commonly used in
dogs) are harmful to your pet and that only a single antigen (vaccine) should
be given at a time, you may encounter difficulty since some vaccines are not
available individually. Keep in mind, though, that there are decades of
evidence gathered from millions of individuals including humans, dogs, cats,
cattle, horses, chickens etc. that multivalent vaccines are an effective and
economical method of protecting individuals from disease.
Balance this,
though, with the belief of some holistic practitioners that harmful effects of
vaccinating may not be recognizable for several generations and that an individual
may not show any signs of vaccine derived diseases in its lifetime. But future
generations (offspring of the vaccinated animal) would not have optimum immune
fitness because of the previously given vaccines.
Wow! Now we
have to factor into the vaccination equation whether or not the pet is
spayed/neutered or will be bred in order to make a proper ethical evaluation as
to current vaccination requests! The choice is yours because there will always
be health care providers who disagree.
The question of
whether or not "annual vaccinations" really should be given yearly is
a good one. How often is Too Often? The answer is somewhat elusive, too,
because the only way we would know if an individual should be vaccinated right
now would be to know that the individual is at high risk of getting the
disease. In other words, if there was a nice test that would say "Yes,
vaccinate immediately! This blood sample indicates that the immune system's
mucosal, cellular and humoral immunity is low and needs reeducating!," then
the choice to vaccinate would be simpler. (That is if you believed in
vaccinating to begin with!) Some types of in-office blood tests are available
at this time. However it may be a while before a wide range of simple and
inexpensive tests for immunity-status-indicators for a multitude of pet
diseases are available. A complicating factor in duration of immunity
after a vaccine is given is the unique character of each individual's Immune
System.
*************
Regarding How
Often to vaccinate, let's hear what a few pet health care professionals have to
say...
What manufacturers
and distributors are saying:
(Based
on interviews with ThePetCenter Director, Dr. Dunn in March, 1999)
Pet owners
should keep in mind that when a laboratory conducts duration of immunity
studies the dogs and cats are healthy and kept in clean, parasite free
surroundings and are very well provided for. This is done not only for humane
reasons but also to be able to evaluate the effectiveness of a vaccination over
a period of time without all the other common variables the average dog might
face. In reality it happens that dogs are vaccinated who have just been
released from weeks of confinement in a kennel or shelter, or are parasitized,
poorly fed or otherwise stressed. Will a vaccine given to a stressed animal be
as effective over a long period of time as the same vaccine given to a normal,
healthy dog? The correct answer is: Maybe and maybe not. Each individual is so
unique that no prediction can ever hope to be 100 percent accurate for any dog,
cat or human when we are talking about what a vaccine will do. And that's a
fact that everyone agrees upon!
Dr. Michael
LaRosh at Fort Dodge Laboratories (one of the worlds largest manufacturer's of
animal vaccines) has stated that he hopes someday there will be a practical and
inexpensive way to measure the overall immune competence of the individual. He
states that particularly with cell-mediated immunity there are difficulties in
establishing the individual's protection. Think of "cell-mediated
immunity" as a strong, high fence around the fort. If this fence is
healthy enough, "humoral antibodies" (which can be measured by doing
serum titers) may not even be needed. And no one is certain what levels of
serum antibodies is a true protective level. Dr. LaRosh says that most of
today's vaccine manufacturers are in the process of conducting extended
duration of immunity studies.
He goes on to
say "If, for example, a five year study indicates that one year after
receiving a vaccine, 90% of dogs are still protected against the specific
disease vaccinated for, and at three years 70% are still protected and at five
years 50% are still protected ... what level of risk of disease will the pet
owner be willing to live with? Every dog owner will have a different comfort
zone and some owners may very well choose to vaccinate yearly, not knowing if
their dog is in that group of 10% of vaccinates who don't hold an adequate
level of humoral immunity after one year. Some pet owners may have a comfort
zone at the three year-70% protection probability level and some will vaccinate
every five years.
"Wouldn’t
it be nice" Dr. LaRosh continues, "if veterinarians had a simple test
that could be run quickly and accurately in the office at the time of the
vaccination appointment? This blood test would assess serum antibody titers of
all the common diseases vaccinated for and give the owner a readout of levels
of protection against the diseases. Then the veterinarian could specifically
customize a vaccination schedule for that patient based upon chances of
exposure to the disease, chances of a reaction to the vaccination, the dog's
health status and age, and the owner's comfort zone. No doubt someday this will
happen."
Dr. Race Foster of Drs. Foster and Smith, Inc., asks the
question "If vaccines really do cause subsequent autoimmune reactions, why
aren’t animals coming down with autoimmune diseases after natural exposures to
the disease? Some dogs and cats may develop immune disorders subsequent to
being vaccinated but it is very hard to prove if the vaccine actually triggered
the problem."
And as far as
making a standard recommendation for vaccinations, he believes that there are
so many variables in each individual dog and cat that a number of
considerations should be explored regarding how many vaccines are administered
and how often.
"And here
is where the pet owner’s veterinarian can be helpful in making the
decision". Dr. Foster goes on to ask a very important and thought
provoking question, "Is a vaccine failure really a fault of the vaccine,
or a failure of the individual to make protective immunity to the vaccine? If a
dog develops an autoimmune disease subsequent to a vaccination why don’t all
dogs develop problems from that product? If a veterinarian had ten dogs in
front of him to vaccinate, there would be ten different immune systems that
would accept the vaccine each in a unique way. Pet owners should keep in mind
that no vaccine for humans or pets is 100% protective, 100% safe, in 100% of
the recipients of the vaccine."
Dr. Foster's
remarks bring up another current hot topic ... do vaccines promote autoimmune
diseases? Volumes could be written on this topic alone. Briefly, an autoimmune
disease refers to a broad range of ill effects brought on by an abnormal response
that The Immune System makes to things it wouldn't ordinarily
respond to.
Something
triggers or stimulates the body to react to its own tissues, to look at its own
tissues as if they were invaders! A good example is autoimmune hemolytic anemia
where the body's own red blood cells are destroyed by The Immune System
because something told The Immune System that the red blood
cells are pathogens, invaders, foreign tissue ... so a battle rages within and
can ultimately cause the individual's death!
It is a known
fact that some infectious disease agents occasionally trigger immune mediated
diseases. Are vaccines also a culprit in stimulating adverse immune
mediated problems? When considering this question, one must staunchly resist
the temptation to condemn all vaccines because of occasional failures or
complications. There are people who will tell you that no vaccine is safe or
effective and that they actually cause more diseases than they prevent.
Conversely, a very strong case could be made that vaccinations have prevented
far more death and disease than any perceived harm they may have done.
(Unfortunately there is no way to prove that an individual is alive today
because a vaccine prevented a fatal disease.)
There is
overwhelming evidence from all over the world and encompassing many different
species of animals that Edward Jenner's idea of stimulating the body to protect
itself against disease prior to being naturally exposed is one of mankind’s
greatest intellectual accomplishments.
I would suggest
that you do some searching on your own through recent dog and cat magazines,
the library, your veterinarians borrowed text books (Please bring 'em back!),
or the Internet. After a few hours of research you will most certainly gain an
insight into the pros and cons of vaccinating; you will begin to approach a
personal vaccine comfort zone. But I'll bet you still won't have a firm
conviction as to what exactly constitutes too many or too often!
Here's an
important word of caution about using the Internet: The problem with the
Internet is that you will have a difficult time sorting out fact from fiction.
Believe me there is a tremendous amount of data available to you through your
computer. However there's a balancing act going on here. You will find everything
from hard statistical facts from the Centers for
Disease Control to absolute garbage spilled from quasi-experts who take a
single case history with questionable data and extrapolate wild and fanciful
horror stories about the dangers of vaccinating your pet. I even read somewhere
on the Internet where a veterinarian stated that there was "no scientific
evidence that vaccinations even work and that they in fact cause far more
disease and misery than benefit"! The real danger lies in the possibility
that someone will actually believe this sort of nonsense.
********************
Since Edward
Jenner 200 years ago began to inoculate humans with a cow pox virus (not
harmful to humans) in order to instruct the human immune system to produce
immunity to the very serious human disease called Small Pox, we humans have
developed some truly magnificent vaccines. The entire world is now free from
the devastating Small Pox disease. Unfortunately, there have been some
failures, too. In your search to clarify your own comfort zone about
vaccinations, you must be very careful to refrain from making sweeping
generalizations from an isolated incident.
A good case in
point would be the claim that some people make against vaccinating for all
diseases just because back in 1954 one batch of one manufacturers vaccine cause
some cases of polio. The problem was quickly rectified and the world has gone
on to be relatively safe from this horrible disease. In fact you and I may be
alive today because as children we were protected against diseases via
vaccinations. A very common mental error is to condemn the entire process
simply because of the occasional imperfection.
There are
claims that dogs and cats are the innocent victims of over-vaccination. Too
many vaccines, given too often, results in autoimmune diseases, arthritis,
cancer, behavioral problems and so on. Proof for those claims is hard to come
by because all these maladies existed long before vaccines were ever used in
animals! There is ample historical and archaeological evidence that animals and
humans living in a "natural state" long before there was industrial
pollution, antibiotics, vaccines, and processed foods also suffered many
of the same diseases from which we modem creatures suffer. So we
have to be careful when we blame one specific practice (vaccinations) for
causing such universal harm!
As an example,
I might substitute for vaccinations, "corn-based pet food".
I then proclaim with irrefutable confidence that all these degenerative
diseases, autoimmune disorders, cancers and arthritic afflictions of dogs and
cats are due to the "modern" trend of feeding dogs and cats cheap,
cooked and processed concoctions of corn that we foolishly call pet food! Who
could prove I was wrong? No one. I would bet I could start a
self-perpetuating theory that cancer, arthritis, autoimmune diseases, and
behavioral problems in dogs and cats are really a result of processed corn in
the pets' diets. Spreading this theory around on Internet sites, written
publications, breed newsletters, and at Holistic meetings, it wouldn't take
long for multitudes of pet owners to subscribe to my theory... and nobody would
ever be able to PROVE that I was wrong! Similarly, no one can disprove
the theory that vaccines are the cause of autoimmune diseases, cancer,
debilitation and bad behavior. Anyone espousing such a theory would find
comfort and confidence for their cause... no one can prove that they are wrong,
if indeed they are wrong.
What some veterinary
associations are saying:
See January, 2001, UPDATE above
Questionnaires
and phone calls to veterinarians in various areas of the country showed that
there is a wide variety of opinions regarding vaccination protocols. In fact
there was a reluctance to be quoted or to fill out a questionnaire requesting
data on vaccine failures, reactions, or dangers and suggested vaccine
procedures. The assumption could be drawn that no one really KNOWS for sure
which way is THE RIGHT WAY. Let’s take a look at what some organizations are
willing to put on paper...
Here is what
the FIRST INTERNATIONAL VETERINARY VACCINES AND DIAGNOSTICS CONFERENCE, held in
Madison, WI, in July, 1997 had to say:
Unofficial
Recommendations:
*Vaccinate
puppies and kittens against the clinically important infectious agents such as
distemper virus, parvovirus, panleukopenia and rabies.
*Avoid
vaccinations before six weeks of age. Give two to four doses of vaccine spaced
two to four weeks apart.
*Give annual
booster vaccine at one year of age. Thereafter give boosters every three years,
unless required more often by law.
*Monitor serum
antibody levels annually between boosters. (tjd: This means that your dog or
cat should have a blood test done to measure the level of "immune
memory" to a disease.)
*Geriatric
animals generally do not need booster vaccinations. Monitor serum antibody
titers instead.
Dr. W. Jean
Dodds, a noted researcher and immunologist in Santa Monica, CA suggests that
when giving a Rabies vaccine... not to administer it at the same time as other
vaccines. Three to four weeks later, other vaccines can be given but Dr. Dodds
believes that after ten years of age booster vaccines are generally not needed
and may even be unwise.
She states
"For animals previously experiencing adverse vaccine reactions or breeds
at higher risk for such reactions (e.g. Weimaraners, Akitas, Harlequin Great
Danes), alternatives to booster vaccinations should be considered. These
include avoiding boosters except those required by law such as Rabies;
measuring serum titers annually for specific diseases; and considering
homeopathic alternatives to vaccinating. Some homeopathic approaches are
considered as 'unconventional' and the pet owner should be provided with an
appropriate disclaimer and should give informed consent to this approach."
Listing each
veterinary association’s vaccination protocols would be quite lengthy, plus
some protocols will be updated at various times. For your reference you may
wish to call an organization and request their current protocols. Your area
veterinary school is another source of advice on vaccination procedures.
The American
Association of Feline Practitioners has recently released a suggested Protocol
for veterinarians to consider when vaccinating cats for various diseases.
Visit the AAFP website (aafponline.org) to see the 29 page report.
The American
Association of Feline Practitioners 1-800-204-3514
The American Veterinary Medical Association 1-847-925-8070
The American Animal Hospital Association 1-800-252-2242
The American Holistic Veterinary Association 1-410-569-0795
What should a pet
owner to do?
Realize that
pet health care providers who truly have your pet's best interest at heart, do
not all agree on what is the ideal vaccination protocol to follow. Accept the
fact that some pet health care providers truly believe that across the broad
spectrum of optimum health, vaccinations throw the animal's vital energies out
of balance. The truth is that vaccines have undoubtedly prevented countless
millions of disease related deaths; unfortunately, a few individuals may
have been harmed along the way.
Like anything
else in life, there is a middle ground that must be struck, an educated and
informed judgment that needs to be made when considering the risks versus the
benefits of vaccinating the pets in our care. Let us all keep an open mind and
a sensitive heart to this issue of vaccinations. If you do have concerns that
need addressing, tell your veterinarian that you would like to consider all the
options prior to vaccinating your special pet.
Someday,
hopefully soon, when we discuss vaccinating our pets, no one will have to ask
if we are giving Too Many, Too Often.
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ALL INFORMATION, DATA, AND
MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATION
PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE KNOWLEDGE OR
OPINIONS OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED AS PROVIDING
MEDICAL OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN
IMPORTANT AND COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU ALONE, IN
CONSULTATION WITH YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.