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Thread: Vaccinating Senior Dogs

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by terrierman41 View Post
    I've been called a lot of things but never that, lol.

    My 13 year old terrier is living the cushy life of leisure now so I'm opting out on the vaccines. I've always been conscious about over vaccinating, and now that he's an old man I'm hyper conscious about putting anything into his body that he may react negatively to.
    You should be so lucky! LOL

    I trust my vet and go with the vet's plan.
    13 year old is not due until 2017 and I'd be very surprised if she lives that long.
    " We are more than our gender, skin color, class, sexuality or age; we are unlimited potential, and can not be defined by one label." quote A. Bartlett


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  3. #12
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    There is absolutely no way I'm getting my 12 year old setter vaccinated - haven't for a couple of years. Most Vets will tell you the same. It's not about the $$$. It's about wasting $$$ on non-required vaccination and the risks that can come from over-vaccinating.

  4. #13
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    x2 Ugo other than rabies and heartworm med for an active field dog there is no reason to over vaccinate.

  5. #14
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    “over-vaccinating”?
    I’m not paying anybody’s vet bill, so I’m not going to tell what you should or shouldn’t. I just think that this discussion is quite financially motivated (just as feed discussions most often are) and has nothing to do with risking a dog’s life because of giving him a vaccine.
    The only factual discussion where one would use the expression “over-vaccinating” is in the context of potential exposure. For example, regardless if your dog is 6 months or 15 years old, if it spends its entire life in solitude on the sofa plus 5min/day in the same corner of a small backyard, well it becomes evident what vaccine preventable risks your dog is going to be exposed to…
    However, if your dog potentially comes in contact with other dogs, perhaps you should talk to your vet about DHPPV (or at least read up on it on some legitimate www) and when you there just ask about Leptospirosis, Coronavirus, Bordetella bronchiseptica etc.
    Compared to treatment, vaccines are really cheap. So unless you don’t care about herd immunity and you will shoot your dog before you even think of calling a vet, perhaps we should have a more discerning discussion on what and why.

  6. #15
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    Keep in mind some regions do have bylaws about rabies vaccination. Personally if it was a pet that didn't interact with wildlife I likely would leave the old bugger to his comfy couch and give him treats instead.
    I’m suspicious of people who don't like dogs, but I trust a dog who doesn't like a person.

  7. #16
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    Which is the real point. If my old girl(13 1/2) is still going to the bush /woods I want her to be vaccinated for leptospirosis which is contracted from water /soil where and an infected animal has peed .... very common in ON
    When she dies I don't want it to be from lepto .

    (I'm not a vet, but from what I read Coronavirus, and Bordetella bronchiseptica cause such minor symptoms that I'm not concerned about them.)
    Last edited by Sharon; October 7th, 2015 at 01:34 PM.
    " We are more than our gender, skin color, class, sexuality or age; we are unlimited potential, and can not be defined by one label." quote A. Bartlett


  8. #17
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    I have kind of a similar view as Sharon on Leptospirosis and Coronavirus (i.e. yes and perhaps not really). My vet is pretty passionate regarding Bordetella vaccine and it's hard to argue given the spread of the disease and how contagious it is (although it's not all that life threatening as far as I'm aware). The other question is if it actually poses a risk to humans.
    The other vaccines I want my dog to have is distemper, adenovirus hepatitis and parvovirus (which often come in some sort of combination vaccine).
    Rabies is not really a choice (and as my dog does not keep a daily log what critters she was chasing, she'd get it regardless).
    On the other hand, I'm really not a believer in the cost/benefit of the heartworm test - at least for a dog that was treated during the previous summer.

  9. #18
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    Now I want that heartworm test every year.

    While the preventatives are excellent, and extremely effective (nearly 100 percent), they are not perfect. More likely than product failure is human error. People may forget to give the product (even if you don’t). Or the chewable may not be swallowed, and instead dropped behind the sofa. Also, people don’t always apply the topical product correctly. It happens, it really doesStill, why have veterinarians become so adamant about the heartworm test?
    It’s possible that if a heartworm preventative is given to a dog with heartworm disease, there could be a serious reaction due to the rapid killing of circulating baby heartworm in the blood stream. Also, a dog with heartworm must be treated, and early identification makes it easier to treat (with fewer side affects), less expensive to treat, and there’s less suffering for the dog." quote

    https://www.google.ca/search?sourcei...+every+year%3f

    Just realized this was some off topic. Back to vaccinations and senior dogs
    Last edited by Sharon; October 8th, 2015 at 01:51 PM.
    " We are more than our gender, skin color, class, sexuality or age; we are unlimited potential, and can not be defined by one label." quote A. Bartlett


  10. #19
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    not saying there wouldn't be any value in the test, but if money is tight (again this and having a complete couch potato are the only reasons not to vaccinate a dog IMHO) the test is one thing I would start thinking about it.
    the reason (and that is my very personal opinion and there will be many that disagree) is that for a dog that has been treated continuously during the summer months are
    a) heartworm is not (yet) as prevalent here as in the southern USA
    b) the antigen test will only detect adult female particulates in the blood
    c) there is a 5-7 month migration time after infection
    d) most vets will end up not prescribe milbemycin due to cost, because the owner is often not willing to pay for it...
    e) they might use ivermecin (same as what is used in preventative drugs, which will kill larvae and microfilaria, but only sterilize the adult worms) instead.
    this might work if it is given over a very long period in sufficient doses. the problem is that this way we will eventually end up with invermecin resistant heartworms (think of penicillin resistance, because we abused it for so long)

    Again, I'm not recommending to take any shortcuts (regardless of the age of the dog), but if you think about not doing what your vet recommends, you better start looking into a lot of details.
    Most likely you'll start to agree with your vet's recommendation or at the very least you will be able to have an educated discussion with them thereafter.
    Last edited by Waftrudnir; October 8th, 2015 at 05:33 PM.

  11. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by terrym View Post
    Keep in mind some regions do have bylaws about rabies vaccination. Personally if it was a pet that didn't interact with wildlife I likely would leave the old bugger to his comfy couch and give him treats instead.
    not bylaws, it's the health care and promotions act and below is the list where rabies vaccination is mandatory for dogs and cats
    Name of Health Unit Effective Date
    1. Revoked: O. Reg. 331/00, s. 1 (1).
    2. Haldimand-Norfolk Regional Health Unit April 1, 1986
    3. Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit September 1, 1986
    4. Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox and Addington Health Unit June 2, 1986
    5. Peterborough County City Health Unit May 15, 1986
    6. Perth County Health Unit October 1, 1986
    7. Hastings and Prince Edward Counties Health Unit September 13, 1986
    8. Middlesex-London District Health Unit November 1, 1986
    9. Oxford County March 1, 1987
    10. York Regional Health Unit March 1, 1987
    11. Huron County Health Unit March 1, 1987
    12. Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit April 1, 1994
    13. Eastern Ontario Health Unit July 20, 1987
    14. Revoked: O. Reg. 331/00, s. 1 (1).
    15. Kent-Chatham Health Unit June 1, 1988
    16. Leeds, Grenville and Lanark District Health Unit June 1, 1988
    17. Bruce-Grey-Owen Sound Health Unit December 1, 1989
    18. Windsor-Essex County Health Unit February 1, 1991
    19. Sudbury and District Health Unit April 1, 1991
    20. Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph Health Unit July 1, 1992
    21. Revoked: O. Reg. 331/00, s. 1 (1).
    22. Revoked: O. Reg. 331/00, s. 1 (1).
    23. Niagara Regional Area Health Unit July 1, 1994
    24. Brant County Health Unit September 1, 1994
    25. Lambton Health Unit November 1, 1994
    26. Halton Regional Health Unit January 1, 1995
    27. Elgin-St. Thomas Health Unit January 31, 1995
    28. Ottawa-Carleton Regional Health Unit November 30, 1996
    29. Revoked: O. Reg. 66/05, s. 1 (2).
    30. Renfrew County and District Health Unit July 1, 2000
    31. City of Toronto Health Unit July 1, 2000
    32. Peel Regional Health Unit July 1, 2000
    33. Hamilton-Wentworth Regional Health Unit July 1, 2000
    34. Durham Regional Health Unit July 1, 2000
    35. Waterloo Health Unit July 1, 2000
    36. North Bay Parry Sound District Health Unit September 30, 2001

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