Vet P.O.V. Outbreak! Another great reason to vaccinate your indoor, “unexposed” cat

November 2nd, 2008  

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Great point, sorry to hear about the outbreak but glad your clinic is so savvy.

My concerns also extend to those indoor cats that escape or suffer home loss during a disaster where they get housed among other animals in mostly poorly ventilated housing situations.

Try as I might, it is difficult to get indoor cat owners to see the risk and those who let their cats roam outdoors in these parts--don't tend to vaccinate either posing risk to predators and the local ecosystem that also houses bobcats, mountain lions, and other critters who are infected by domestic pets roaming loose and pooping where ever they please.

If you figure out a good motivator--let me know.

Diana Guerrero November 2nd, 2008 11:52:00 AM

I'm a vaccine minimalist myself, but I do keep my animals vaccinated. I think the issue of vaccine-related reactions, sarcomas, etc. amongst many owners is an issue of well-intentioned people with too little information making decisions without the appropriate base of knowledge w/which to interpret the information they have. It really does get kind of ridiculous. Vaccines are good, period. Yes, over-vaccination, vaccinating w/sub-par product, or vaccinating for every disease for which a vaccine is available w/out regards to the animal's exposure is silly and potentially dangerous. But the big picture is that vaccines are safe, effective, and important. We had a client recently bring in her sick, unvaccinated, indoor-MOSTLY cat...she kept saying how she didn't "believe" in vaccines b/c they caused tumors and veterinarians were just trying to rip her off. Yeah, lady - that's exactly it. Way to go protecting your pet from the evil veterinary community. *rolls eyes*

anna November 2nd, 2008 04:33:00 PM

So what are your recommendations for fvrcp??

Connie November 3rd, 2008 12:44:00 PM

Like anna, I minimize the cats' vaccinations but they *are* vaccinated. I believe that vaccines in general are good, but following the new protocols is also important. I had a difficult time after we moved finding a vet who followed the new protocols and used the less likely to cause cancer vaccines. I lost a cat to Fibrosarcoma, and I believe over vaccination played a role. But from what I read, genetics also plays a role in vaccine associated Fibrosarcoma. I still have his littermate, so the genetic part is of interest to me.

Raven's Mom November 3rd, 2008 12:52:00 PM

Connie: Here's the AAFP's 2006 recommendations (I rely on these in my practice):
http://www.catvets.com/uploads/HTML/VaccineSummary...

Dr. Patty Khuly November 3rd, 2008 02:12:00 PM

maybe my parents' house has invisible signals that speak to cats saying "it's fun to live here. camp out in their windows and they just might invite you in" because on numerous occasions especially in windows open weather we've had strays on our deck peeking in the windows. we even had an orange cat who looks very similar to our indoor only cat laying with him body to screen to body. if it wasn't for him being fully vaccinated, i'm pretty sure scary disease transmission would be possible.

Sarah November 4th, 2008 05:51:00 PM

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