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<blockquote data-quote="Koffi Babone" data-source="post: 1243291" data-attributes="member: 22429"><p>In Canada, there is a difference between the one year and 3 year rabies vaccine. The label actually has a "3" for the 3 year vaccine. As in the US, the 1st dose needs to be boostered within 12 months. The European Union also has the same condition.</p><p></p><p>Concerning the article by DePaolo:</p><p></p><p>"Humans are only vaccinated as babies and children but some farms vaccinate their horses 6 plus times a year for a horse's entire life."</p><p>The first part is not entirely true. I can guarantee you that a travel clinic will booster you for tetanus before international travel and that the ER doc will booster you for tetanus if you happen to poke yourself with a nail or other unclean object.</p><p></p><p>I'd really like to see this author post some references. I find it hard to believe that someone was able to associate side effects to a vaccine 30 days post injection, I'd like to know what criteria they used.</p><p></p><p>"Some veterinarians may elect not to vaccinate horses within 3 weeks of international shipment."</p><p>This part is misleading. Conditions for international shipment are dictated by the importing country (the importing country is bringing the animal into their country, so they get to decide what they want and don't want), not the vet doing the export related work.</p><p></p><p>Thimerosal is toxic and contains mercury, yes, but it is not the same as methylmercury, the compound that is responsible for Minamata disease (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minamata_disease" target="_blank">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minamata_disease</a>). Whereas methylmercury bioaccumulates, thimerosal is excreted by the body. Trying to imply that both are similar is like saying ethyl alcohol (the one you drink) and methyl alcohol (causes blindness) are similar.</p><p></p><p>"Antibody titers are a way to know if your horse is in need of any vaccines."</p><p>The author does not mention that this can be very expensive. The vet needs to draw blood, most probably send it away for titration analysis and the client has to come back a few weeks later for the interpretation of the result. It is often cheaper (in terms of time and money) to just vaccinate.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Koffi Babone, post: 1243291, member: 22429"] In Canada, there is a difference between the one year and 3 year rabies vaccine. The label actually has a "3" for the 3 year vaccine. As in the US, the 1st dose needs to be boostered within 12 months. The European Union also has the same condition. Concerning the article by DePaolo: "Humans are only vaccinated as babies and children but some farms vaccinate their horses 6 plus times a year for a horse’s entire life." The first part is not entirely true. I can guarantee you that a travel clinic will booster you for tetanus before international travel and that the ER doc will booster you for tetanus if you happen to poke yourself with a nail or other unclean object. I'd really like to see this author post some references. I find it hard to believe that someone was able to associate side effects to a vaccine 30 days post injection, I'd like to know what criteria they used. "Some veterinarians may elect not to vaccinate horses within 3 weeks of international shipment." This part is misleading. Conditions for international shipment are dictated by the importing country (the importing country is bringing the animal into their country, so they get to decide what they want and don't want), not the vet doing the export related work. Thimerosal is toxic and contains mercury, yes, but it is not the same as methylmercury, the compound that is responsible for Minamata disease ([url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minamata_disease]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minamata_disease[/url]). Whereas methylmercury bioaccumulates, thimerosal is excreted by the body. Trying to imply that both are similar is like saying ethyl alcohol (the one you drink) and methyl alcohol (causes blindness) are similar. "Antibody titers are a way to know if your horse is in need of any vaccines." The author does not mention that this can be very expensive. The vet needs to draw blood, most probably send it away for titration analysis and the client has to come back a few weeks later for the interpretation of the result. It is often cheaper (in terms of time and money) to just vaccinate. [/QUOTE]
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