There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

No shots for Spot? Study finds owners’ vaccine hesitancy can extend to pet dogs

In the study, published in the medical journal Vaccine, researchers asked 2,200 Americans their thoughts on vaccines and whether they were dog owners. If they were, respondents were then asked whether they would vaccinate their dogs for rabies.

Approximately half of the pet owners surveyed expressed some degree of vaccine hesitancy — with 53% saying they believed vaccines administered to dogs were unsafe, ineffective or unnecessary, the study found.

PrincessLeiasCat ,

Rabies is not something you want to FAFO with. You don’t just feel bad for awhile. You die a horrific death, game over, you lose, etc.

And if you potentially do get bit, the human rabies vaccine isn’t a regular shot. It’s lots of shots over a period of time.

TLDR get your pets fucking vaccinated.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

We need a national showing of Old Yeller.

DocMcStuffin ,
@DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world avatar

Now: vaccine hesitancy for pets

Soon: entire household contracts rabies after family pet attacks

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I never actually expected the zombie apocalypse to be the way things ended up destroying civilization.

ptz , (edited )
@ptz@dubvee.org avatar

There are very few groups I outright hate. Groups I dislike strongly, yes there are many, but viscerally hate? Very few.

Aside from Nazis, anti-vaxxers* are one of the groups firmly in the “I hate you with every ounce of my being” category. Not only are they stupid and selfish, but they’re willfully stupid and selfish in such a way that their stupidity affects the health and well-being of others around them. And now our dogs, too.

*I’m not talking about immuno-compromised people who want but can’t get vaccinations. If your doctor advises you against it, then don’t do it; I’m not talking about you (unless your doctor is Dr. Pepper or something). I’m talking about the idiots who believe Jenny McCarthy and Facebook over actual doctors.

ickplant OP ,
@ickplant@lemmy.world avatar

Yup, my nephew can’t get vaccines because he had a heart transplant as a baby. He’s already had a few health scares, and I really don’t want another one to happen because some people are too selfish or ignorant to get vaccinated.

ickplant OP ,
@ickplant@lemmy.world avatar

I probably should have included this in the body, too:

That group was 6% more likely to have dogs that were not vaccinated for rabies, and 27% more likely to oppose rabies vaccine mandates when compared with survey respondents who did not express vaccine hesitancy, according to predicted probabilities outlined in the study.

So there are already dogs out there without their rabies vaccines, and it’s probably only going to get worse. Great.

Pronell ,

If your dog bites someone and is not vaccinated, the typical procedure is to euthanize the dog and cut its head off for testing, at the owner’s expense.

It’s a huge fuck around and find out situation for these idiots, and that’s with rabies being extremely rare.

Brokkr ,

Yeah, but the dog deserves a better human. This punishes the dog and the human. We should just punish the human.

Better laws would be that you can’t own a dog that isn’t vaccinated. I know that doesn’t solve the problem after a bite, but it would help the dogs in the long run.

Pronell ,

100% agreed. Just wanted that info about the consequences added to the conversation. Might sway someone to protect their animals.

LordOfTheChia ,

This punishes the dog and the human. We should just punish the human.

Cut the owners head off and sent it for rabies testing?

“Sir, your pet bit someone and doesn’t have their rabies vaccine. Due to a new animal compassion law, I’m going to have to cut your fucking head off.”

(Pulls out rusty serrated knife)

GiantChickDicks ,

This isn’t entirely accurate. Unless it’s a repeat offender when it comes to biting or the animal is exhibiting symptoms of illness, the general practice is for the animal to be quarantined for ten days either at home or a veterinary clinic or shelter. The animal must have exams performed by a veterinarian every few days to check for signs of illness. At the end of the ten day period, the animal must have one final exam to be released from quarantine. After each exam a report must be sent to the county humane officer.

This is the protocol in the state of Wisconsin. I’ve worked in shelters and veterinary clinics in the state, so this is something we deal with regularly. Last year we even had a dog bite another person while they were supposed to be quarantining at home. That dog was not euthanized.

Pronell ,

Good to know, I appreciate your clarification. My wife is a Vet Tech, and I knew I wasn’t telling the full story since it isn’t my field.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines