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- #101
This one is cheaper, but it doesn't include an exam, from what I saw.
Fees
That may be the case. However, a lot of the stories I've read have been about dogs that were getting vaccinated for the first time. Their owners were skeptical about vaccination but then decided to have it done. When they did, their pets fell ill and lots of them died. Daisy has already been jabbed twice on the right or left side (honestly can't remember). So should she be vaccinated on another side? With my cats, the vet usually does it on the back of the neck or the lower side of the cat.What the vets claim and what the latest research shows are two different kettles of fish. The vets claim that the binder used to make the vaccine last three years is what's triggering the cancer, the binder for the one year is totally different. The latest research says that it's the actual injection doing it, not the vaccine, not the binder, whenever you put anything via needle into the skin (including subcutaneous fluids) that can cause injection site sarcoma. Why the vets are parroting the old studies and not talking about the newest study, I don't know.