Vaccinations for Puppies and their drawbacks
In
all developed countries it is an accepted routine to vaccinate
puppies at around 8 weeks at age, with a follow-up jab at 12 and
sometimes 16 weeks of age. While the actual risk of puppies getting
one of the diseases varies much from place to place, and also
according to the regime of handling the owner employs (staying in a
proteced environment or going to places where other unknown dogs
roam for example), various people discovered to their dismay that
vaccins are not without a risk.
The practice in Portugal is to give puppies the normal
adult-version of the vaccin, normally containing dead cells of 4
diseases: Distemper (esgana/hondeziekte), Leptospirose (ziekte van
Weill), Parvovirose and Hepatitis. This vaccination needs 1
reinforcement at 12 weeks of age.
In our experience this vaccin is sometimes too strong for
especially puppies if small breeds, or weakened puppies. Better
results are obtained wit a special puppy vaccin, which will protect
only against Distemper and Parvovirose (the two main killers for
small puppies); the drawback being that 2 reinforcements jabs will
be needed for full protection.
Even with the special puppy vaccination however, there is still a
small chance that the pups will get a weaker version of the two
diseases; weaker meaning that they can still be so seriously
affected that they might die or have to be put down.
The best routine in my opinion therefore
is:
1. Making sure that the
bitch is recently vaccinated, if possible just before mating, and
otherwise in the first stage of pregnancy
2. Worm the puppies 2 or 3 days before vaccination
3. Control the puppies’ temperature and heartbeat before
vaccination
4. Make sure the pups get rest after vaccination (no stress, no
long journeys, no physical exhaustion)
Especially when the
mother is a potential carrier of the vaccinated diseases, special
attention needs to be paid to the health of the pups. If the mother
is a carrier, chances are that the puppies have either a)
antibodies in their blood, or b) a subclinical version of the
disease. In either case vaccination can be extremely dangerous for
their health.
Conclusion
In
any case, vaccination will provide protection against potential
lethal diseases. Keeping pups indoors as long as possible (potty
training on newspaper works); protecting them against contacts with
potentially unvaccinated dogs, vaccinating as late as possible,
probably around 10-12 weeks of age will be safer than at 8 weeks of
age), and doing a good health-check before vaccinating are all
measures which will keep negative effects to a minimum, while
protecting the puppy against unprotected exposure.