For many years veterinarians have been recommending yearly vaccinations
for our beloved pets claiming without these yearly boosters our pets will not
be protected from disease. In my research I have found this to be true since
the 1950’s. Over the years many veterinarians were suspicious that the
vaccines used were giving much longer periods of protection than one year.
They new this because they never saw distemper, hepatitis or provirus
disease in dogs that had been vaccinated for many years. Many veterinarians
tend to think they are undercharging for complex surgery and subsidize
those procedures with the money they earn on yearly vaccinations. No one
knows how this practice came about but it has existed since the 1950’s.

Manufactures also gave an incentive to veterinarians and still do, to sell
more vaccine if boosters were recommended annually as well as a one-year
mind set among the bureaucrats that staff the USDA Center for Veterinary
Biologics that dictate vaccination protocols. These are the same deep
thinkers that put a two-year expiration date on a vial of water.  Our
veterinarians also get the same incentive protocol  when recommending the
foods they sell.

Do the math; veterinarians have clients coming into their practice every day
for boosters; if we stopped doing yearly boosters It would cut their income
more than half.  It would decrease the side effects; remember the immune
system of your pet is stressed by these vaccinations. "
Dogs develop allergic
reactions, facial edema, enteritis, lethargy, fevers, pruritis, nausea,
coughing, seizures".
It is also suspected that vaccinations can trigger certain
autoimmune diseases such as
Addison’s disease in dogs. Many times these
reactions are life threatening. Vaccines contain many ingredients besides the
dried virus. Some of these, antibiotics and adjutants (enhancers) are
implicated in vaccine reactions.

Approximately 1% of dogs adverse reactions are reported yearly; this being
low because many veterinarians
do not report them to the proper
authorities and find excuse after excuse to convince the pet owners that the
reaction is not caused by the booster. Reason being they know most pet
owners will make the decision to STOP these yearly boosters. As humans we
vaccinate our children but after our series of boosters we do not need more
yearly boosters throughout our lives.  This is true for our pets also but if our
veterinarians were honest with us it would cost them hundreds of thousands
of dollars in booster costs. Yes vaccinations cause reactions and diseases in
our pets; if we did not vaccinate yearly there would be less medical problems
and no need for additional vet visits aside from their yearly check ups and
unexpected emergency care.  

Several years ago I myself had brought two of my puppies to my vet for
booster shots; right in front of my vet both puppies started to shake, shiver,
foam from the mouth and collapse. The reaction happen just minutes after
they were vaccinated and my vet shrugged it off and refused to fill out the
proper forms and send them to let the proper authorities to let them know
both puppies had sever reactions to the vaccination.  Needless to say that
was the last time I ever used his practice and started my research on Vaccine
Reactions.

Since our horrible experience I have stopped vaccinating my Pugs; aside
from my Sierra having
Psychomotor Seizures and Camara who in 3 years has
had 2
Partial or Focal Seizures (Petite Mal) all 14 of my Pugs are in excellent
health.
The Truth Behind Yearly Vaccinations
Additional information I feel the public should
know.
Do you know that a 1 cc vial of vaccine for a 150 lb Rotty is the same 1 c.c vial of vaccine for an 18
lb pug and the same for a two pound puppy. Yes its true; there are no measured amounts. This
protocol has always been disturbing to me; no one has ever given me a solid explanation that
makes me feel comfortable giving my toy puppy the same amount of serum in their vaccination
that any vet would give someone's 150 dog.

Information you need to know about
PRESCRIPTION DRUGS

The information I've provided on this site is just the tip of the iceberg; be sure to check back for
more documentation.