 
Canine
Nutrition
Vaccinations
 
 

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Shots may not cost much, but, in truth, there
are no cheap shots. The cost is extremely high. Sometimes up
front...most often down the line. And the cost cannot be computed
in dollars and cents.
According to Catherine O'Driscoll, author
of Who Killed the Darling Buds of May?, a well-researched
book about vaccine, vaccines are not always effective in doing
the job for which they were designed: conferring immunity for
disease.
In fact, the results
of her Canine
Health Survey reveal that many dogs contract the very disease
for which they were supposedly immunized. In fact, at least 50%
of dogs in the CHC Survey who were diagnosed with a disease for
which we commonly vaccinate became ill within three months of
being vaccinated for that disease.
Consider how the body's exposure to vaccine
differs from the usual exposure to disease.
1. Vaccines are usually given in combination;
disease exposures do not commonly occur in multiples.
How many dogs have you ever heard of coming
down with parvo, distemper, kennel cough, leptospirosis, and
corona at the same time? Yet, when we inject our dogs with a
multi-valent vaccine, we expect them to cope with an influx of
varied disease-causing agents at once. This is a major assault
and insult to the immune system. The immune system is overwhelmed
with the effort to produce so many different anti-bodies at the
same time, often leaving it too worn-out to respond to other
disease-causing agents that it would normally repel in normal
circumstances.
2. Vaccines are given several times over
a short period of time; disease exposures are not usually so
concentrated.
The same arguments holds for this point,
as well. How many dogs face so many diseases on a monthly basis
over several months? Yet, multi-valent vaccines challenge our
dogs this frequently when we give them so often.
3. Vaccines are injected into the body,
bypassing the body's natural defenses; disease organisms must
overcome these defenses before they can cause disease.
In general, when exposed to a disease-causing
agent, the optimal response involves the whole body, beginning
with its first line of defense, the skin and mucus membranes.
In addition, various bodily secretions are designed to erode
or destroy bacteria as they move through the upper respiratory
system or the gastro-intestinal tract. Specific blood cells destroy
and/or ingest harmful organisms that enter the bloodstream. The
body reacts to disease agents in several ways. Often it develops
a fever, in an attempt to make the environment unconducive to
bacteria or viruses. Coughing and sneezing are the body's attempt
to expel them from the respiratory system, as vomiting and diarrhea
cleanse the gastrointestinal tract. In contrast, vaccines are
injected into the body and are absorbed directly into the bloodstream
without the body having received any warning whatsoever that
they are on their way.
4. Vaccines stimulate the formation of
specific antibodies; disease exposure stimulates the whole body
to react to a foreign substance, a broader and more natural response.
Vaccines target specific diseases. As such,
the antibodies produced are specific to that particular bacterial
strain. Many diseases are caused by multiple strains of a bacteria,
however, and it is impossible to vaccinate against every
strain of viruses or bacteria. Leptospirosis, for example, is
a range of some 150 different bacterins. In addition, modified
live virus vaccines can shed in the environment (through an animal's
feces or urine) and mutate, posing the threat of disease and
creating a further dilemma for the vaccine makers.
5. Vaccines are administered to puppies
at an age when their immune systems are not yet fully developed
and when they still have maternal antibody protection.
Maternal antibodies are specifically designed
to protect puppies from disease until their own immune systems
are mature enough to mount a full-scale defense against invaders.
To compensate for this, vaccine manufacturers have developed
vaccines that are strong enough to over-ride maternal anti-bodies.
Why? Why vaccinate a puppy who already should have adequate maternal
anti-body protection. Unless, of course, the dam's own immune
system has been compromised by vaccinations she received
herself!
In closing, if the immune system is not healthy,
then vaccinations are the last thing you want to consider, for
they will only further stress an already weakened system.
If, however, your dog has a strong immune
system, it can handle the average assault. Vaccine won't change
that. The body, whether human or canine, was designed to resist
disease. Poor nutrition and vaccines actually undermine these
built-in defenses.
A healthy immune system requires optimal
nutrition, which is why I, and others, advocate a canine diet
that consists primarily of raw meaty bones. A well-nourished
body is better equipped to handle encounters with most disease-causing
agents.
This is the foundation of a holistic approach
to canine health and well-being.
copyright 1998 Barbara Cicognani
(The author grants permission to
reprint this artcile, provided such reprint is for information
purposes only and is not conveyed for any commercial consideration
and further that credit is given to the author, Barbara Cicognani.)
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