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What happens if I don't give my puppy shots?

Macie Jenkins
Macie Jenkins
2025-08-29 08:47:02
Count answers : 22
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Diseases that you pet can be vaccinated against can have devastating effects. For most of the viruses that affect pets today there is still no treatment other than treating symptoms, so prevention is the only route to prevent suffering and – potentially – death. Exposure to infection isn’t just a random encounter with an unfortunate infected pet either – some diseases such as canine parvovirus can live in the environment for up to nine months, and some can even be transferred to humans. The immunity is passed on through the mother’s milk and lasts for a couple of weeks, but after that their immature immune system is open to infection unless vaccinated. Canine parvovirus is often a fatal disease and causes severe diarrhoea and vomiting. Dogs become severely dehydrated, and their immune system is damaged so that they can’t fight infection.
Ned Schmidt
Ned Schmidt
2025-08-18 03:21:10
Count answers : 17
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Your Pet Will Be Susceptible to Detrimental and Fatal Diseases. Whether you like it or not, your pet will be more vulnerable to various viruses. It doesn’t matter if they are indoor pets. These microscopic assassins enter your home and find their way to your pets. If you don’t protect your pets with vaccines, you will be putting them at risk of contracting diseases. Since they don’t have activated antibodies to fight off infections, they would only be left to deteriorate. Fatal results usually follow. If dogs aren’t vaccinated at a young age, they will be vulnerable to diseases such as rabies, canine distemper, hepatitis, canine parvovirus, Lyme disease, canine influenza, leptospirosis, and kennel cough. If cats do not receive their shots during kittenhood, they will most likely contract feline calicivirus, rabies, feline distemper, feline viral rhinotracheitis, feline leukemia, chlamydia, and kennel cough.
Tyler Wintheiser
Tyler Wintheiser
2025-08-09 21:25:39
Count answers : 21
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Vaccinations prevent serious infections and bacteria that have led and lead many dogs to death. Contact with pathogens could quickly lead to death if your dog is not vaccinated. When nursing ends, in fact, the protection of the antibodies present in their mum’s breast milk also ends and, at about 8 weeks, it is therefore advisable to start with the first vaccine. Puppies have no defences and contact with the outside world puts them in serious danger. These include: distemper, parvovirus, leptospirosis, infectious hepatitis, rabies, infectious tracheobronchitis. But there are many others, including very lethal diseases. The spread of infections has drastically reduced thanks to vaccines. Each vaccinated animal contributes to avoid the spread of serious diseases.