If you are concerned about the rabies vaccine causing a reaction, discuss w/ vet. In many states, it is permissible for the vet to get a titer test and, if the result is high enough, they can obtain a waiver from the state veterinarian board, for you. Ask about the risks going this route if your dog does bite someone. I know of a few folks online who do this for rabies, but they have small house dogs and it isn't quite the same as for those of us who are taking our dogs out and about regularly, IMO.
While vaccine reactions seem rare, they are also becoming more and more common, and THAT is scary. Maybe the diagnosis is getting better, maybe the social media lets us share more to a wider audience, maybe the vaccines are stronger than 20 years ago, maybe generation by generation dogs' bodies are adapting differently, I don't know. But SOMETHING is changing.
Yes, the protocols did change recently, here is one link: http://www.dogster.com/dog-health-ca...ation-schedule
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