Usually you will be ok as long as you dog is currently in good health. I would contact your vet though to discuss what the 7 vaccines are and if they will have any interaction with any medication you dog is currently on (if any)
MCV (meningococcal conjugate vaccine)
Marijuana poses no special risks to someone who got the HPV vaccine. The risks are the same as for those who have not been vaccinated.
Urination is just one of those things that people do whether they have been vaccinated or not.
it is possible because of the fact that it takes a couple of weeks for the vaccine to take affect.
If you already have H1N1 virus in your body and is about to get sick anyway it can be, because you then get a double dose. That's how all vaccines works. There haven't been enough time top test the vaccine on ppl under the age of 18. But the risk of getting it is higher then if you don't get vaccinated. H1N1 spreads 4 times faster then a normal flu. So it's safer to have your children vaccinated.
If your child had the vaccine previously, they may get a mild case without itching or blisters. However, if your child has not been vaccinated, the diagnosis is not likely to be chickenpox if bumps have been showing up for two to three days without itching or blistering. Contact your health care provider for advice specific to your situation.
Go get the vaccine for the child. The shingles is because you had chicken pox at some point, but I don’t think that there would be a direct transmission.
If you're thirteen or older, you can get the second chickenpox vaccine as long as it's been at least 28 days since the last one. For patients under thirteen, they must wait three months minimum until the second vaccine.
TB vaccine is a live attenuated vaccine (LAV). This type of vaccine prepared from living micro-organisms (viruses, bacteria currently available) that have been weakened under laboratory conditions.LAV vaccines will replicate in a vaccinated individual and produce an immune response but usually cause a mild or no disease.
Although rubella is generally considered a childhood illness, people of any age who have not been vaccinated or previously caught the disease can become infected.
The devil is in the details of exactly what you are referring to here. Do you mean: Can a person who has been vaccinated against smallpox then catch it at a later date, and while not getting sick from it, transmit it to others? Ans: In general, no. The vaccination not only keeps you healthy, but stops the virus in your body. Can a person who has recently been vaccinated against smallpox pass on smallpox to someone else? Ans: No, we don't use weakened variola virus (smallpox virus) to inoculate people. Can a person who has been recently vaccinated against smallpox using the standard live vaccinia virus type vaccine pass on a vaccinia virus infection to other people? Ans: Yes! And, it can be dangerous. That's why people should be careful with their fresh smallpox vaccination wounds. Can a person who has been recently vaccinated with the newest MVA-type smallpox vaccinations pass on a vaccinia infection on to others? Ans: No. At least theoretically not. But, it's so new, we can't say for absolute certain.
Your dog should be vaccinated as a puppy with a course of two injections (he must be 12 weeks or older at the second injection to get the full immunity), then have a booster once a year. In the UK, this would be with Distemper, Parvovirus, Adenovirus, Parainfluenza and Leptospirosis. So yes, if he's been vaccinated against Parvo he should be protected! Check his vaccination booklet and it should give the name of the vaccine and what's in it.