A couple of group members have posted links about vaccinations and I just
wanted to say that it is well worth
every one to read all of it so that you have a better understanding as to
what the shots can do, good and bad. Try to remember that Vets are in a
business and as such need to draw customers in to make a living. Not only
does the vaccines make them money but so does the payment of the exam, even
if a dog doesn't need the shot, but gets it anyway.  I am only saying this
because their are still to many vets out their that are looking at their
wallet instead of what is the best thing to do for our dogs. Vaccinations is
a long term controversy with many Vets. The only way to get around it is to
educate yourself. You can Google it and will find many many other sites on
the controversial subject  as to when and how often to inoculate your dog. 
 
When I managed pet shops about 20 years ago, it was also the first time that
the Parvo Virus came out. Puppies were dying by the thousands and once they
came up with a vaccine, everyone was pumping 
their dogs and puppies with it on a regular bases before they even had
enough data on the vaccine to
see what it's long term effect would do to a dog. The breeders at that time
were not only giving the killed 
virus to the puppies but the live virus as well. The result was that the
Virus was now spreading like wild fire 
and killing the breeders as well. The ones that did survive and were used as
breeders were now producing puppies with a very fragile immune system and
other health issues were popping up in their stock for years.
 
It wasn't until a couple of years later when more research was done, that
they realized that a puppy
has it's own immunity to Parvo and many other virus's if it is bred from a
mother who had previously
been vaccinated. That immunity was now also in the mother's milk. So to give
a 6 week or younger
puppy, a Parvo shot or other shots, which is what the PM,s and breeders were
doing at that time,
the milk only neutralized the vaccine and was therefore in effective, but in
fact was causing
the puppies to actually come down with Parvo and most did not survive.
 
I had two such puppies from that period. It was my first pet shop management
job. It was the
first time that the owners were selling puppies. They got a shipment in of
12 different breeds.
Within days, every time I opened the store I would find a dead puppy, that
the night before looked fine..
It was horrible how the Parvo virus can consume a puppy. Most of them looked
like they were dead for over
a week rather then just a couple of hours. To this day, I am left with the
horrible memories of those days 
and it is haunting. Which is why I have always tried too educate myself as
much as possible on everything that has to do with the dog world.
 
The male dog which was a maltese that survived would not have survived, if I
didn't buy him. The owners did nothing to help the puppies and Fluffy was
the last one, so I bought him, took him to a good Vet and quit the pet shop
and stayed home with him day and night and nursed him back to health. The
Vet said that he should not have survived and considering the other 11 didn
t, and Fuffy's vital signs were showing that he was half gone and not
expected to live another 24 hours.  But he did live to 16 and 1/2 years, and
cancer of the liver is what got him in the end.

I went through the same scenario with a female maltese, my little Gidget, a
year later, plus she was hypoglycemic. A friend had called me and told me
that a sick puppy had been delivered to her store. She asked if I would take
care of her if she bought her from her from the truck driver that delivered
or he was going to put her down, by putting her in a plastic bag and then
attaching it to the exhaust on his truck. She was suffering and he wanted to
put her out of her misery, rather then drive her all the way back to MS in
the none air conditioned truck. (Yes folks, this is the sought of horrible
stuff that goes on all the time in pet shops, and worse) The pet shop owner
would not take her as she was half dead. I said yes and I paid her the $75
00 and nursed Gidget back from Parvo too. Because of these two, I am a firm
believer of using Nutr-Cal that builds them up fast and hand feeding
whatever you can get into them when ever a dog is under any stress of any
kind. I am also a firm believer of being at your dogs side 24/7 when they
are that sick and not to be isolated in a cage with very little human
contact, if at all possible. I really believe that if these two were kept at
the Vets, or in a back room at pet shop and in a cage, without some one
edgeing them on to hang in their, that they would have given up. I find this
is even more important with puppies who really don't have any understanding
of anything yet, except a kind voice being constantly their for them.


During those years, they were still telling pet owners to give your dogs
Booster shots every year and Rabies shots every year. No one had publicsized
any research on the side and long term effect of these shots yet. As a
result most of us believed our Vets and gave them the Booster. The following
year, Fluffy went for his Booster, I was petrofied of the thought of him
getting Parvo again unless he did have it. I cannot tell how horrible it was
for him for 48 hours! He did nothing but cry and whimper and let out a
horrific wolf howl every once in a while. You couldn't even touch him with
your finger to comfort him, without him letting out a yelp of pain. They
didn't have anything to counter act the Booster, so my poor Fluffy who
suffered so much the year before had to endure it one more time. After that
I swore no more shots!  I hated and still do hate the fact that by Federal
law we still have to give our dogs repeated Rabies shots, which is so
unneccsary, since their hasn't been a case of rabies in over 20 years across
the states and a dog is immune from it for life with just one shot.

Thanks to Dr Jean Dodds never ending research, today we don't have to keep
giving them Boosters. It is our choice now to educate ourselves and decide
what we think is the best protocol for our dogs. 

My dogs are rescue dogs, so I had no way of knowing as to whether they were
given any shots at all. So for them they received their booster shot when I
got them and they will never be given another one. Last year Princess had a
mild reaction to the rabies shot, which is a three year shot. At the end of
the three years I will be forced into telling the town that I don't have her
anymore,  just so that I don't have to give her another one. She is licensed
through the town because she was a shelter dog and I have to show proof that
she is vaccinated every three years in order to renew the license or show
that I don't own her.

Gigi was a private rescue, she got her Booster, but because she is about 5-6
years old, she probably did have
a rabies shot some where along the line. I don't have to worry about her
with wildlife, because the only thing we have are squirrels. And again their
hasn't been a rabies case in over 20 years statewide, so I doubt that she
will ever get a rabies shot.

Here are the links again, just in case anyone missed them in the previous
post.

http://www.doglogic.com/vaccineinfo.htm#news  

http://www.weim.net/emberweims/Vaccine.html

http://www.doglogic.com/vaccination.htm


    Peggy & The Girls
 
Don't Buy, Adopt & Save A Life!
                  
                   
 
"Until there are none...Rescue One"



-------Original Message-------
 
From: Laura Moreno
Date: 2/6/2011 1:19:25 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Chihuahuas] Vaccination question
 
  
If you acquire a puppy that is 15 weeks old and has never been vaccinated,
do you still need to give 3 sets of shots 3 weeks apart? My vet is closed
today so I decided to put the question to the group and see what you-all
have to say. Thanks. 

Laura

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