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	<title>SusansPetCare.comHealth</title>
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		<title>We are Over Vaccinating our Pets</title>
		<link>http://susanspetcare.com/2010/04/04/we-are-over-vaccinating-our-pets/</link>
		<comments>http://susanspetcare.com/2010/04/04/we-are-over-vaccinating-our-pets/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Apr 2010 13:23:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Susan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Natural Pet Care]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[booster shots]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cats]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dogs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[over vaccinating]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pet vaccines]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://susanspetcare.com/?p=802</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A few years ago I learned that vaccinating my pets every 1-3 years was unnecessary. In fact, it is down right harmful. With the exception of the Rabies vaccine, I have stopped giving my pets booster shots. I hope the reprint of this article will help you make an informed decision for your animal companions.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A few years ago I learned that vaccinating my pets every 1-3 years was unnecessary. In fact, it is down right harmful. With the exception of the Rabies vaccine, I have stopped giving my pets booster shots.</p>
<p>I hope the reprint of this article will help you make an informed decision for your animal companions.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-803" src="http://susanspetcare.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/eddybalsam.jpg" alt="" width="152" height="108" /></p>
<p>February 27, 2005</p>
<p>TO: The Agriculture, Conservation and Forest Committee</p>
<p>RE: LD 429, An Act to Require Veterinarians to Provide Vaccine  Disclosure Forms</p>
<p>My name is Kris Christine and I live with my family in Maine. Before I  begin my testimony, I’d like to advise the committee that one of the  world’s leading veterinary research scientists, Dr. W. Jean Dodds,  wanted to be here today to testify in support of LD429, but could not do  so because of prior commitments. With her permission, in the  attachments to my testimony, I have included her letter to  Representative Peter Rines dated February 17, 2005 (Attachment 5)  resolutely endorsing this first-in-the-nation veterinary vaccine  disclosure legislation.</p>
<p>I am here today to respectfully urge this committee to recommend  passage of LD429 – An Act to Require Veterinarians to Provide Vaccine  Disclosure Forms because pet owners need the scientifically proven  durations of immunity (how long vaccines are effective for) in order to  make informed medical choices for their animals.</p>
<p>Many Maine veterinarians have failed to inform clients that most core  veterinary vaccines protect for seven or more years, and pet owners,  unaware that their animals don’t need booster vaccinations more often,  have unwittingly given their companions useless booster shots – taking  an unnecessary toll on their finances and animals’ health. The human  equivalent would be physicians vaccinating patients against tetanus once  every year, two years, or three years and not disclosing that the  vaccines are known to be protective for 10 years.</p>
<p>For years veterinarians have sent pet owners annual, biennial and  triennial reminders for redundant booster shots and justified it with  vaccine manufacturers’ labeled recommendations. According to the  American Veterinary Medical Association’s (AVMA) Principles of  Vaccination (Attachment 6), “..revaccination frequency recommendations  found on many vaccine labels is based on historical precedent, not on  scientific data … [and] does not resolve the question about average or  maximum duration of immunity [Page 2] and..may fail to adequately inform  practitioners about optimal use of the product…[Page 4] .” As the  Colorado State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital states it:  “…booster vaccine recommendations for vaccines other than rabies virus  have been determined arbitrarily by manufacturers.”</p>
<p>Dr. Ronald Schultz, Chairman of Pathobiological Sciences at the  University of Wisconsin School of Veterinary Medicine, is at the  forefront of vaccine research and is one of the world’s leading  authorities on veterinary vaccines. His challenge study results form the  scientific base of the American Animal Hospital Association’s (AAHA)  2003 Canine Vaccine Guidelines, Recommendations, and Supporting  Literature (Attachment 7). These studies are based on science – they are  not arbitrary. The public, however, cannot access this data. The  American Animal Hospital Association only makes this report available to  veterinarians, not private citizens, and Maine’s pet owners are unaware  that the AAHA Guidelines state on Page 18 that: “We now know that  booster injections are of no value in dogs already immune, and immunity  from distemper infection and vaccination lasts for a minimum of 7 years  based on challenge studies and up to 15 years (a lifetime) based on  antibody titer.” They further state that hepatitis and parvovirus  vaccines have been proven to protect for a minimum of 7 years by  challenge and up to 9 and 10 years based on antibody count. So, unless  the Legislature passes LD429 requiring veterinarians to provide vaccine  disclosure forms, dog owners who receive an annual, biennial, or  triennial reminders for booster shots will not know that  nationally-accepted scientific studies have demonstrated that animals  are protected a minimum of 7 years after vaccination with the distemper,  parvovirus, and adenovirus-2 vaccines (see Page 12 AAHA 2003 Guidelines  attached, and Table 1, Pages 3 and 4).</p>
<p>“My own pets are vaccinated once or twice as pups and kittens, then  never again except for rabies,” Wall Street Journal reporter Rhonda L.  Rundle quoted Dr. Ronald Schultz in a July 31, 2002 article entitled  Annual Pet Vaccinations may be Unnecessary, Fatal (Attachment 2). Dr.  Schultz knows something the pet-owning public doesn’t – he knows there’s  no benefit in overvaccinating animals because immunity is not enhanced,  but the risk of harmful adverse reactions is increased. He also knows  that most core veterinary vaccines are protective for at least seven  years, if not for the lifetime of the animal.</p>
<p>The first entry under Appendix 2 of the AAHA Guidelines (Attachment  7) “Important Vaccination ‘Do’s and Don’ts” is “Do Not Vaccinate  Needlessly – Don’t revaccinate more often than is needed and only with  the vaccines that prevent diseases for which that animal is at risk.”  They also caution veterinarians: “Do Not Assume that Vaccines Cannot  Harm a Patient – Vaccines are potent medically active agents and have  the very real potential of producing adverse events.” Very few pet  owners have had this disclosed to them.</p>
<p>The AVMA’s Principles of Vaccination (Attachment 6) states that  “Unnecessary stimulation of the immune system does not result in  enhanced disease resistance, and may increase the risk of adverse  post-vaccination events.” (page 2) They elaborate by reporting that:  “Possible adverse events include failure to immunize, anaphylaxis,  immunosuppression, autoimmune disorders, transient infections, and/or  long-term infected carrier states. In addition, a causal association in  cats between injection sites and the subsequent development of a  malignant tumor is the subject of ongoing research.”(Page 2)</p>
<p>Referring to adverse reactions from vaccines, the Wall Street Journal  article cited above (Attachment 2) reports: “In cats there has been a  large increase in hyperthyroidism and cancerous tumors between the  shoulder blades where vaccines typically are injected.” With modified  live virus vaccines (distemper, parvovirus, hepatitis), some animals can  actually contract the same disease which they are being inoculated  against. If the public knew an animal’s immunity to disease is not  increased by overvaccination, they would certainly not consent to expose  their pets to potential harm by giving them excessive booster shots.</p>
<p>Veterinary vaccines are potent biologic drugs – most having proven  durations of immunity much longer than the annual, biennial or triennial  booster frequencies recommended by vaccine manufacturers and  veterinarians. They also carry the very real risk of serious adverse  side affects and should not be administered more often than necessary to  maintain immunity.</p>
<p>The extended durations of immunity for vaccines is not “new” or  “recent” science as some members of the Maine Veterinary Medical  Association (MVMA) have claimed. AAHA reveals on Page 2 of their  Guidelines that ideal reduced vaccination protocols were recommended by  vaccinology experts beginning in 1978. A Veterinary Practice News  article entitled “Managing Vaccine Changes” (Attachment 3) by  veterinarian Dennis M. McCurnin, reports that: “Change has been  discussed for the past 15 years and now has started to move across the  country.”</p>
<p>According to a September 1, 2004 article in the DVM veterinary news  magazine (Attachment 1), the 312 member Maine Veterinary Medical  Association (MVMA) “champions full disclosure of vaccine information to  pet owners.” MVMA president, Dr. Bill Bryant, is quoted as stating: “Its  time for something like this to come out … disclosure forms will be an  important resource to have available, [and] if it goes before the  Legislature, we’d likely support it.”</p>
<p>It is time. Pet owners have the right to know the scientifically  proven durations of immunity for the veterinary vaccines given their  animals, as well as the potential adverse side effects. LD 429 would  make that standardized information available to all pet owners.</p>
<p>Respectfully submitted,<br />
Kris L. Christine</p>
<p>PERMISSION GRANTED TO CROSS-POST THIS MESSAGE.</p>
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