yes
Yes you can but the Rabies vaccination has to be given by a Veterinarian. It is a killed virus and the DHLP/Parvo are from killed or modified live viruses. Perfectly safe but have your Veterinarian do the vaccinations.
Anyone can give their own injections if they know how. If not your vet will have to do it. With the exception of the rabies vaccine. In some states it is illegal for anyone but a vet to administer the rabies vaccine.
Any public health care facility such as a clinic can give a child vaccinations.
A rabies shot for dogs works in the same way that any vaccinations on a person would. When the vaccine is given it last a certain amount of time and then you need to be vaccinated again. When a dog is a puppy or if a dog is receiving their first rabies vaccination, they are given a one year does. This means that you need to give the dog the vaccine next year. However after that vets typically give dogs a injection the lasts three years.
There is no single shot of rabies vaccination. Three shots of preventive vaccination are given on day 0, 7, 28. Alternately on day 0,28 and after six months. But I will advice to go for five does of anti-rabies vaccine, even if you are protected. The sixth shot may not be taken. But you will take it out of immense fear generated by people around you. Your physician will be forced to give you that shot. You can go for it.
Yes. I can get the rabies. But it will not transmit the disease to other animals.
yeah that is just fine but give the other one a vaccination too!
If you take your dog to the vet. The vet will know which ones are important. Ones he might get are Parvo, Distemper, and Rabies.
you need yellow fever vaccination and proof of it and anti malaria medicine for the first 21 days i prefer malarone I suggest you ask your GP They will give you a list. (:
No. Frogs do not carry rabies. And even if they did, driving a bike over one would not give you rabies.
He should have had his first round of shots and be on his last round plus be dewormed and now its time for his rabies.
Yes, you can. Vaccinations administered too early can interfere with the immunity that the mother transfers to the puppy immediately after birth. Always contact your veterinarian to set up a vaccination program for puppies.