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Cat Vaccination Myths And Misunderstandings

That adorable kitten you've just adopted depends on you to keep them happy and healthy, which means providing a cat-friendly home, a healthy diet, and lots of love. Another vital aspect of this care is vaccination. However, it's not unusual for cat guardians to misunderstand which cats need which vaccines and when, plus what protection vaccination offers. So, let's explore some common myths and misunderstandings to set the record straight about cat vaccination.

Myth: Kitten vaccines protect for life

(Photo Credit: Dina Damotseva / Getty Images)

There is a widely held misunderstanding that vaccinating a kitten gives them immunity for life. This is false. Many perfectly well-meaning cat parents don't get their cats booster shots because they don't realize immunity wanes with time.

Booster shots are important to maintain the cat's protection against disease. We know this by looking at blood antibody titers, which show levels fall over time to the point where they are no longer detectable.

Once this happens, if the cat encounters infection, they are potentially at risk because the immune system may no longer remember how to fight against the bug.

How long a cat remains protected varies between individuals, and there are many variable factors that influence this. So rather than put the cat through blood tests each year, manufacturers did a lot of research to check out the average protection time and when a booster dose is needed.

It is this data that the vet uses when advising a cat parent that their cat needs another shot.

Myth: Older cats no longer need vaccination

Your senior cat has been vaccinated all their life. Surely, in their old age, they have built up enough immunity to skip the booster?

Actually, no. While this is a logical argument, sadly this isn't the case.

Firstly, even with a healthy, strong immune system, the protection drops over time and needs "boosting."

Secondly, older animals have weaker immune systems. This means they are less able to fight infections and depend more on vaccine protection, rather than less. Thus, it becomes more important, not less, for seniors to get their booster shot.

Myth: Indoor cats don't need to be vaccinated

Wrong! (Well, mostly.)

Some of the nastier viruses, such as feline panleukopenia virus, are equivalent to a super-villain in terms of toughness. They can survive on sidewalks in all weathers for long periods of time. If you walk on the virus, you can bring it indoors on your shoes, so not even indoor cats are safe.

Therein lies the crunch. An indoor cat is at low risk but not no risk. However, your veterinarian will risk asses the cat and may opt out of vaccinating against conditions that require close contact to spread, such as feline leukemia virus.

Myth: We over-vaccinate cats

Many people worry about over-vaccination in pets. It's a concern veterinarians take very seriously. This is why vets avoid unnecessary vaccinations by adapting vaccine protocols to meet each individual cat's risk factor and how long immunity lasts to a particular virus.

To do this, vets divide the vaccine components into core and non-core. This simply means essential and non-essential. For example, vaccination against rabies is core, whereas protection against feline leukemia virus is non-core for an indoor cat.

In terms of how often to repeat a dose with a booster shot, this is decided by how long protection lasts. For example, protection against feline leukemia lasts one year, and requires a yearly booster, while protection against cat flu lasts for three years.

Myth: Vaccines do more harm than good

(Photo Credit: FatCamera / Getty Images)

Every responsible cat parent should make an informed decision about what's best for their pet as an individual. However, when weighing up the pros and cons of vaccination, it's relevant to know the benefits far outweigh the risks.

Diseases such as cat flu, distemper, and feline leukemia are still out there and have life-changing consequences. Balance this against the risks of vaccination which can be divided into common-but-mild reactions and rare-but-serious, as outlined below.

Swelling

After a vaccine, around one in 10 cats experience a soft swelling at the injection site. This is a temporary lump that goes away after a couple of weeks and nothing to worry about.

Limping

This reaction mainly affects young kittens, usually at their first vaccination. It's thought to be due to the Calici virus ingredient — part of cat flu — and the immune system registering the vaccine.

Affected kittens may run a mild fever, limp, and go off their food. The effect lasts for two to three days and then resolves of its own accord.

It is usually a one-off event and doesn't recur with subsequent vaccines.

Feline Injection Site Sarcomas (FISS)

There is no denying these injection-related tumors are serious. Studies show that this is a rare complication of injection, affecting approximately one to four in every 100,000 cats.

Since vaccines are one of the most frequently administered injections, FISS has become linked to vaccination — but can occasionally occur with other injections, such as long-acting antibiotics or steroids.

To reduce this risk, vets take care to tailor vaccine protocols to the individual to reduce unnecessary vaccinations. They also give vaccines in an extremity, such as a back leg, and each year record where the injection was placed, so any suspicious swelling can be linked back to the injection and monitored.

When all's said and done, it's up to each cat parent to make an informed decision about what's best for their pet. But just be sure to base that decision on the facts, rather than fiction, of cat vaccinations.

The post Cat Vaccination Myths and Misunderstandings appeared first on CatTime.

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Fox's Jeanine Pirro Goes Quiet When Colleague Points Out She's Vaccinated

Normally pugnacious Fox News host Jeanine Pirro went momentarily silent Tuesday on The Five during a segment on COVID-19 vaccines.

Co-host Jessica Tarlov was discussing how social media companies must "figure out a system to stop people from spreading" disinformation and misinformation about vaccines, though she was also was skeptical of Meta temporarily blocking searches for vaccine information.

Social media sites, she explained, are where many young people obtain information. "You need to find some safe middle ground where people know the vaccine is safe for you but you don't—" Tarlov said before Pirro seemed to make a sound of disgust.

"What? You're fine. You're vaccinated," Tarlov told her, giving her the chance to explain herself. But Pirro simply stared ahead, blank-faced, and waited until later in the segment to state her grievance, which was that the vaccine doesn't prevent infection.

Tarlov then quickly jumped in, "But it keeps you alive."

In December 2021, Fox News' parent company, Fox Corporation, required employees working in New York City to be vaccinated. More than 90 percent of Fox's employees had been vaccinated at that time, according to the company.

The following August, the mandate was dropped.

With new COVID-19 variants leading to a rise in hospitalizations and deaths, the Food and Drug Administration recently approved booster shots from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna designed to thwart the XBB.1.5 variant.

A Centers for Disease Control panel on Tuesday recommended that Americans 6 months old and up receive an updated vaccine. The CDC also announced last week that it found that antibodies from an existing vaccine or a prior bout with COVID-19 protect against one particular strain of the virus, BA.2.86.


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