Pet Vaccination Schedule

Pet vaccination is extremely important for protecting dogs and cats against dangerous viral and bacterial diseases. Vaccines help build immunity and reduce the risk of life-threatening infections.

Why Vaccination is Important

Vaccination protects pets from deadly diseases such as:

Age of Inoculation

Vaccination generally starts at 32 days of age in puppies.

Puppy Vaccination Schedule

  1. Puppy DP
  2. DHPPiL Vaccine
  3. Corona Vaccine
  4. DHPPiL Booster
  5. Corona Booster
  6. Anti-Rabies Vaccine
  7. Kennel Cough Vaccine
  8. Annual Anti-Rabies Booster
  9. Annual Kennel Cough Booster

Rabies vaccine is usually given at 3 months of age followed by a booster after one month and then yearly vaccination.

Immunity Duration

Most vaccines provide immunity for approximately one year depending on the manufacturer and vaccine type.

Signs and Symptoms of Major Diseases

Canine Distemper

Symptoms include fever, coughing, vomiting, diarrhea, lethargy, nasal discharge, seizures, paralysis, and neurological problems.

Canine Hepatitis

Common signs include fever, abdominal pain, vomiting, jaundice, lethargy, appetite loss, and eye cloudiness.

Parvo Virus

Parvovirus causes bloody diarrhea, vomiting, dehydration, weakness, fever, and severe gastrointestinal infection in puppies.

Parainfluenza

Dogs may develop coughing, sneezing, nasal discharge, fever, and respiratory infection.

Leptospirosis

Symptoms include fever, kidney failure, liver damage, vomiting, blood in urine, dehydration, and weakness.

Kennel Cough

Kennel cough causes dry hacking cough, sneezing, nasal discharge, gagging, and mild fever.

Rabies

Rabies causes aggression, excessive drooling, paralysis, behavior changes, and is almost always fatal once symptoms appear.

Feline Calicivirus

Symptoms include sneezing, oral ulcers, eye discharge, drooling, and loss of appetite.

Feline Rhinotracheitis

Cats may show sneezing, conjunctivitis, fever, eye infection, and breathing difficulty.

Panleukopenia

This serious disease causes vomiting, diarrhea, dehydration, fever, weakness, and sudden death in kittens.

Important Note

Rabies and Leptospirosis are zoonotic diseases and can spread from animals to humans.

Precautions for Puppies

Frequently Asked Questions

Puppy vaccine Schedule

Puppie's vaccination starts at 32 days of age and last at 4 months of age.

Dog vaccination Schedule

Dogs are vaccinated annually with DHPPiL, Corona, Kennel Cough and Anti Rabies Vaccine. Top Dog vaccine includes Virbac, Vanguard, Boehringer, Dechra

Cat's vaccination Schedule

Kitten's vaccine starts at an age of 6 weeks and completes at an age of 4 months and then annual vaccination is done. Top cat Vaccine includes Virbac

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