Do you give your dog there shots

Who gives your dogs there shots

  • The vet

    Votes: 1 100.0%
  • Neighbor

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Friend

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I do it my self

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    1
I do them, spent time giving insulin shots twice a day, after that a moment doing a cat it easy. Here the feed store carries the same as the vet's office, for fostercare they have me take the label and the reciept for the vaccine, and staple it to the calendar. Since the reciept is date stamped they'll accept that.
 
Quote:
Oh, I feel your pain, I am close to that too...
If this helps you;
I asked my vet for a "suicide pill" as I to refuse to drag her in to the vet on her last day on earth. I was told no, of course I begged, finally got a bottle of injectable Valium. My loyal dog's last moments are going to be warm and comfortable! Hope you can perhaps negotiate the same if you are OK with IV injections??

And BTW I agree with you PurpleChicken===I am opposed to vaccines on a healthy adult dog. Puppy shots only, the rest are a sham, the dog retains immunity for life, unless somehow immunocompromised. This includes rabies but I understand they want to keep tight control over the one disease a dog can get that humans can contract also. Overvaccinating can can cause more problems than it solves and vaccines are CHEAP to buy in bulk; they are a easy and big money maker for veterinary practices and sometimes the bread and butter of small clinics.
 
I take mine to the vet. Gives us a chance to check on things we might miss plus my "kids" are getting old so I just want the vet to check them over to make sure. I get a discount for multiple pets and senior pets, lol.



I've seen in a few towns in SC where they have shots clinics in parking lots of shopping centers. Gaffney and Rock Hill are a couple of places I've seen signs posted for certain days and times. Rabies has been bad in this area lately
 
Quote:
Oh, I feel your pain, I am close to that too...
If this helps you;
I asked my vet for a "suicide pill" as I to refuse to drag her in to the vet on her last day on earth. I was told no, of course I begged, finally got a bottle of injectable Valium. My loyal dog's last moments are going to be warm and comfortable! Hope you can perhaps negotiate the same if you are OK with IV injections??

And BTW I agree with you PurpleChicken===I am opposed to vaccines on a healthy adult dog. Puppy shots only, the rest are a sham, the dog retains immunity for life, unless somehow immunocompromised. This includes rabies but I understand they want to keep tight control over the one disease a dog can get that humans can contract also. Overvaccinating can can cause more problems than it solves and vaccines are CHEAP to buy in bulk; they are a easy and big money maker for veterinary practices and sometimes the bread and butter of small clinics.

I'm glad others agree with me on vaccinating. I almost deleted my post and didn't want to start a debate.


I'm curious about your vet giving you valium. Valium, a benzodiazepine, to my knowledge will not cause death. Typically a barbiturate is given which causes an overdose and cardiac arrest. If the dog is passing on it's own then the valium will quicken the process and keep the animal sedated.

Thanks for replying SuburbanMiniFarm. I've done internet searches on this and most link to forums with people arguing. It seems many people feel euthanizing an animal at home is cruel and dropping it at a vets office is humane. Makes you wonder...
 
I take my animals in for all their shots. I do the puppy/kitten series followed by a one-year booster and then do blood titers to test their immunity after that. Most dogs have immunity for about 3-5 years with the basic shots (that's after doing a puppy series followed by a one year booster). I just had to booster my 6 year old dog, after she tested very low immunity to parvo, but good immunity to distemper. Almost all vaccines are now every 3 years (including rabies), as studies have shown that provides adequate immunity. Some aren't, like the Purevax rabies vaccine is yearly, but it is non-adjuvanted and causes less reaction in the animal (so safer, but shorter immunity). I don't like to vaccinate any more than is necessary, and I only vaccinate if the disease is often deadly or hard to treat (I don't vaccinate for kennel cough, although in rare cases the disease can cause deadly pneumonia).

That being said, I'd recommend everyone get their animals vaccinated for rabies, at whatever interval your state requires. The reason it must be done by a veterinarian is to assure compliance and that it is done correctly. Every year 50,000 people die of rabies, just not in this country. And that is because of the vaccinations that we give our animals and that people know to report bites to their doctor. Wild animals carry rabies, especially bats (that can expose even indoor only animals). Some states can immediately euthanize an animal if it bites (for ANY reason) and doesn't have proof of rabies vaccination (the ONLY test for rabies is to send the brain to be tested), some only require quarantine (but it depends on type of animal). So if you are going to forego your rabies vaccine, check your state law first.

As far as whether you should do regular visits, I think of it this way... would an early diagnosis change what you do? Would you spend $2000 fixing a leg? If you found out they had heart disease would you treat it? Would you treat cancer? Would you spend $300-$500 on getting their teeth cleaned? If the answer is No, then regular visits can be skipped. If the answer is yes, then you should be getting regular checkups. My one dog came up very mildly lame, turns out he tore his cruciate ligament (ACL). If you don't fix it in dogs, they'll usually have crippling arthritis in a few years. It's something I plan on fixing (I don't want to have to euthanize my dog at 5 years old for lameness), but if you wouldn't then you can skip those visits. The one thing I think you should get them seen for is pain, as its unfair to leave a pet suffering when it can easily be stopped. And with skipping regular visits you should educate yourself on common signs of illness and important animal medical knowledge (like suddenly having potty accidents often means there is a urinary tract infection, fat cats can die if they don't eat for 3 days (fatty liver disease), changes in water consumption, food, sleep habits etc can all be signs of disease, and that sort of thing).

There are options for euthanasia at home, and many vets can do it at your house. For the exact reason that no one wants an animals last minutes to be stressful. The other option would be getting enough sedatives for at home and then taking them to the vet when they are pretty much unconscious. It's a tough enough time, without having to stress out your pet too.
 

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