Not exact matches
Under Indiana law, all dogs,
cats and ferrets older than 3 months
of age must be
vaccinated against the rabies virus.
The decision to
vaccinate a
cat with a specific non-core vaccine involves a careful assessment
of the
cat's lifestyle,
age, health status, exposure to other
cats (and the health
of these
cats), vaccine history, and, in some cases medications that the
cat is being treated with.
Pregnant
cats and mothers with newly - born kittens should never be
vaccinated with the MLV vaccine (a live - virus shot) until the kittens are born and have reached 4 weeks
of age.
Dogs and
cats must be
vaccinated for rabies and licensed when they are four (4) months
of age.
The North American veterinary schools are changing their protocols for
vaccinating dogs and
cats to reflect the finding that a modified live virus vaccine given after six months
of age produces immunity for the life
of the pet.
Cats vaccinated at less than 12 weeks
of age should be revaccinated at 12 weeks
of age.
General guidelines state that
cats should be
vaccinated for rabies at 3 months
of age, revaccinated in 1 year, and thereafter every 1 - 3 years depending on the product guidelines and local requirements.
Dogs and
cats are first
vaccinated for rabies between 4 and 6 months
of age.
Do not
vaccinate adult
cats for FeLV — even when they've entry to the outdoors — since pure immunity to this disease may be very strong by the time the
cat is ~ 1 12 months
of age.
Cats are
vaccinated with 2 vaccines given 3 to 4 weeks apart, starting at 9 weeks
of age or older.
State law mandates that dogs,
cats and ferrets be
vaccinated by a licensed veterinarian by 4 months
of age and then at regular intervals thereafter.
The standard protocol to
vaccinate cats and dogs is a first injection at 3 to 4 months
of age and then again at one year
of age.
Virginia law states that all domesticated dogs and
cats must be rabies
vaccinated by four months
of age by a licensed veterinarian (this is why rabies vaccines can not be administered by our LVTs at technician appointments).
Only
cats less than one year
of age and at risk
cats should be
vaccinated against Feline Leukemia virus.
VACCINATIONS ARE REQUIRED: N.C.G.S. 130 A — 185 AND BRUNSWICK COUNTY ORDINANCE ARTICLE II SECTION 2A STATES: The owner
of every dog and
cat shall have the animal
vaccinated against rabies at four (4) months
of age, again at sixteen (16) months
of age and then every three (3) years by a licensed veterinarian.
Cats over one year
of age, if not previously infected, are immune to Feline Leukemia virus infection whether they are
vaccinated or not.
Hundreds
of dogs,
cats, and kittens
of all
ages and sizes will be available to choose from and each pet is spayed or neutered, micro-chipped,
vaccinated, and ready to go home immediately.
Whether or not to
vaccinate with noncore vaccines relies upon upon a number
of issues including the
age, breed, and health status
of the
cat, the potential exposure
of the
cat to an animal that has the disease, the kind
of vaccine, and the way frequent the illness is within the geographical area where the
cat lives or could visit.
Like the distemper - parvo vaccine in dogs, this vaccine is recommended for all
cats starting at
age 6 to 8 weeks and is given every 3 weeks for a series
of 3 vaccinations.Adult
cats should be
vaccinated every 3 years.
All dogs and
cats between the
ages of twelve and sixteen weeks should be
vaccinated.
Kittens and puppies will receive booster vaccines every two weeks until four months
of age, adult
cats and dogs will receive a two - vaccine series, and all
cats and dogs over three months
of age are rabies
vaccinated by an APA!
The Dog Law also contains a section on rabies vaccination which requires all dogs over 3 months
of age to be
vaccinated and all
cats to be
vaccinated if they spend any part
of a 24 hour day inside a dwelling.
However, dogs and
cats must receive a second rabies vaccination within one year
of receiving their first vaccination, regardless
of the type
of vaccine used or the
age at which the animal was initially
vaccinated.
In Texas, state law requires that dogs and
cats be
vaccinated against rabies by 4 months
of age and on a 1 - year or 3 - year basis thereafter depending on the vaccine used.
Again State law is very clear and requires all dogs and
cats to be
vaccinated against rabies by 3 months
of age.
We begin
vaccinating cats against feline leukemia at 12 weeks and 16 weeks
of age and recommend vaccination every year after that.
The City
of Houston Municipal Code requires that anyone who owns, keeps, possesses, or has control
of a dog or
cat four months
of age or older must have his or her pet licensed and
vaccinated against rabies every year.
Local ordinances mandate that all
cats over four months
of age must be
vaccinated for rabies and licensed in Campbell, Monte Sereno and Santa Clara.
Given that most
cats are
vaccinated when they are neutered, this gives us a hint (and nothing more than that) that the
cat may very well have received a vaccine past the
age of 16 weeks.
Do not
vaccinate adult
cats for FeLV — even if they have access to the outdoors — since natural immunity to this disease is very strong by the time the
cat is ~ 1 year
of age.
All you will find is a rare article that reports a pet vaccine technical failure when the animal was: 1)
vaccinated at too young an
age, 2) was already infected before it was
vaccinated or within a few days after the vaccine was given, 3) when the dog or
cat was seriously sick or nutritionally deprived at the time
of vaccination or 4) was suspected to have a genetic defect in its immunity.
At our clinic in Napa, community
cats are spayed / neutered and eartipped; treated for fleas and ticks with Frontline Plus ®; and
vaccinated for rabies, rhinotracheitis, calicivirus and panleukopenia (
cats under the
age of 3 months do not receive a rabies vaccine).
For outdoor
cats,
vaccinating only kittens under one year
of age for feline leukemia is recommended, since kittens
of this
age may be susceptible to the virus.
Kittens and
cats that go outside should be
vaccinated for Feline Leukemia (FeLV) at 9 weeks
of age or older and a follow up booster given in 3 - 4 weeks, then one year later.
Write a description
of your pet, state how your pet gets along with other animals (dogs good with
cats or not),
age, any medical information (spayed,
vaccinated, etc.) and be truthful about why you are giving up the animal.
At - risk kittens can be
vaccinated at around nine weeks
of age, with a booster given in three weeks, and then given at an interval dictated by the lifestyle and risk
of exposure
of the
cat.
This program involves returning apparently healthy, mature (over 16 weeks
of age / at least 4 pounds in weight), community
cats back to the location where they were found after the
cats are sterilized,
vaccinated and sometimes microchipped.
Adult
Cats: Regardless of age, if never vaccinated before or with unknown history, cats should be vaccinated with RHCP (4 in 1) and then repeated in 3 - 4 weeks, then be revaccinated annually for l
Cats: Regardless
of age, if never
vaccinated before or with unknown history,
cats should be vaccinated with RHCP (4 in 1) and then repeated in 3 - 4 weeks, then be revaccinated annually for l
cats should be
vaccinated with RHCP (4 in 1) and then repeated in 3 - 4 weeks, then be revaccinated annually for life.
The city
of Lake Elsinore also requires all
cats over the
age of 4 months be
vaccinated against rabies and licensed.
Healthy
cats over three months
of age and
vaccinated for FeLV are highly unlikely to contract the virus from another
cat.
One study found adequate serum antibody titers to last for at least 6 years for feline panleukopenia virus, 4 years for feline calcivirus, and 3 years for feline herpesvirus in
cats vaccinated at 8 and 12 weeks
of age with polyvalent killed vaccine.
[FN132] Colony care givers must make arrangements for the colony to be fed regularly, for sterilizing all
cats that can be captured,
vaccinating all
cats that can be captured, and must make every attempt to sterilize kittens over eight weeks
of age, remove kittens from the colony for adoption, remove sick or injured
cats for veterinary care, and maintain records.
All
cats four weeks
of age and older entering a shelter environment should be
vaccinated as soon as possible upon entry.
Kittens that are less then 4 weeks
of age should never be inoculated with
cat distemper vaccine, while kittens 9 weeks
of age are most suitable to be
vaccinated.