02/28/2026
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The Pros and Cons of Dog Vaccinations: What Every Owner Should Understand
Vaccinations have played an important role in reducing serious and often fatal diseases in dogs. Illnesses like parvovirus, distemper, and rabies were once widespread and devastating. Because of vaccines, many people today have never witnessed how severe these diseases truly are.
However, vaccination is not a one-size-fits-all, lifelong annual necessity for every dog. Understanding the difference between core vaccines, non-core vaccines, titers, and frequency is critical to making informed decisions.
This is not about being “pro-vaccine” or “anti-vaccine.” It’s about being educated and using appropriate medical care.
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⚫️Core Vaccines vs Non-Core Vaccines
Core vaccines protect against diseases that are highly dangerous, widespread, and well-studied:
• Canine Distemper
• Canine Parvovirus
• Canine Adenovirus
• Rabies (required by law)
These vaccines are highly effective and generally provide long-term immunity.
Non-core vaccines are given based on lifestyle and exposure risk:
• Leptospirosis
• Bordetella (kennel cough)
• Lyme disease
• Canine influenza
These are situational, not universally necessary.
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⚫️Known Issues and Risks with Certain Vaccines
Most dogs tolerate vaccines well, but adverse reactions do occur.
These can include:
• Fever
• Lethargy
• Injection site swelling
• Allergic reactions
• Immune-mediated disease (rare but documented)
Leptospirosis vaccine in particular has historically had a higher rate of adverse reactions, especially in young puppies and small breeds.
Lepto protection is also short-lived and strain-specific, meaning vaccination does not guarantee full protection.
This vaccine should be considered carefully based on geographic risk, not given automatically to every dog.
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⚫️What Are Titers?
A titer test is a blood test that measures antibodies to determine whether your dog still has immunity to certain diseases.
Instead of automatically vaccinating, titers allow you to see if your dog is already protected.
Many dogs maintain immunity for years—sometimes for life—after their initial vaccine series.
Titers are commonly used for:
• Distemper
• Parvovirus
Rabies titers exist but do not replace legal rabies vaccination requirements.
Titers help prevent unnecessary repeat vaccination.
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⚫️Why Annual Vaccination Became Common Practice
Annual vaccination became routine decades ago, not necessarily because immunity only lasts one year, but because:
• It ensured owners brought dogs in for yearly exams
• It simplified veterinary schedules
• It was believed explain immunity duration was shorter than we now know
Modern immunology research has shown that core vaccine immunity often lasts many years, and sometimes for life.
The American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA) now recognizes that core vaccines should not be automatically given annually.
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⚫️A Logical Comparison: Humans vs Dogs
Humans receive core vaccines primarily during childhood:
• Measles
• Mumps
• Rubella
• Polio
After that, most people never receive those same vaccines again.
The immune system develops memory.
Dogs’ immune systems function the same way.
Once proper immunity is established, it does not simply disappear every 12 months.
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⚫️A Common-Sense Vaccination Approach
A widely accepted, balanced protocol includes:
Puppy Series
• Initial vaccines between 8–16 weeks
One-Year Booster
• Reinforces long-term immunity
Rabies
• Every 3 years as legally required (after initial and one-year dose)
After that:
• Titer testing instead of automatic revaccination
• Non-core vaccines only if risk justifies it
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⚫️Our Personal Protocol
In our program, we follow this approach:
• Full puppy vaccine series
• One-year boosters
• Rabies vaccination every 3 years as required by law
After the one-year booster, we do not continue routine repeat vaccinations.
Instead, we rely on the immunity already established.
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⚫️The Goal Is Protection — Not Overuse
Vaccines are a valuable medical tool.
But like any medical intervention, they should be used appropriately—not automatically.
Over-vaccination does not necessarily increase protection, but it does increase exposure to unnecessary medical intervention.
🐾The goal is simple:
Protect the dog.
Preserve their health.
Avoid unnecessary risk.
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🐾Every Dog Is an Individual
Lifestyle matters.
A dog living on rural acreage has different exposure risk than a dog in a dense urban boarding environment.
Vaccination decisions should be based on:
• Age
• Health
• Exposure risk
• Lifestyle
• Veterinary guidance
Not habit.
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🐾Final Thought
Vaccination is one of the reasons dogs live longer today than ever before.
But proper timing, proper frequency, and proper necessity matter.
More is not always better.
Better is better.
MK Haus DDR German Shepherds