Vaccination Requirements Boarding cats must provide proof of an FVRCP (distemper / upper respiratory)
vaccine given within the last 36 months.
Keep in mind that
vaccines given within two weeks of each other can interfere with each other so you do not want to separate vaccines by less than a two week period but separating vaccine can mean your pet has less stimulation to deal with at one time.
Not exact matches
The Hepatitis B
vaccine is
given right after your baby is born, usually
within hours after birth.
In people exposed to smallpox, the
vaccine can lessen the severity of, or even prevent, illness if
given within four days of exposure.
A new «candidate
vaccine» Mosquirix could be
given to children in Sub-Saharan African countries
within the next five years.
If proof is not presented, the dog must be
given the
vaccine within ten days of reaching the United States and
within four days of reaching its final destination.
FeLV: $ 23 * An FeLV
vaccine may only be
given if your cat has had a negative FeLV test
within the last 3 weeks or you can show proof that the cat has had an FeLV
vaccine on an annual basis.
Forty years ago, there was a popular misconception
within the veterinary field that
vaccines could be
given continuously without harming the animal.
Two doses of
vaccine must be
given for optimum immune response — the doses are administered over a 2 - to 3 - week period and establish immunity
within 1 to 2 weeks after the second dose.
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.
Dogs: DAPP (Distemper & Parvo), Rabies & Bordetella
given within the last 6 months * For the best protection of your pet and the other pets in class and the facility, proof of veterinary
vaccines must be presented at the first night of class to be admitted into the training class.
The first month an animal enters the shelter, he / she is
given a complete check - up, tested for common medical conditions that are easily passed
within feral animal communities,
given all
vaccines and is spayed or neutered before ever leaving the shelter to a «forever home».
Marketing the Flu program to the businesses
within the community to
give to their employees & mass administration of flu
vaccines.