Ten tips for avoiding vaccination pitfalls
The following advice is published by Dr David E Anderson, Head and Associate Professor of Farm Animal
Surgery, Ohio State University . He is also a director of the International Camelid Initiative.
- Clean, new syringe - do not leave syringes lying around. Open them just before using and be efficient.
- Clean, new needle - and keep it that way. Needles can become quickly contaminated in the hair, dirt and debris of the barn.
- Clean new vaccine vial - vaccines from multi dose vials should be used or discarded. Many adverse reactions I have seen are from
large vials stored for prolonged periods. If you need 20 doses, buy TWO 10 dose vials rather than a 50 dose vial. That 50 dose vial
that had 20 doses removed is unlikely to be sterile when you come back 6 months or a year later to do "another round"
- Accurate administration - inject under the skin preferably, not intra muscular (IM). IM increases likelihood of adverse reaction
because of accidental IV administration. (Most vaccine reactions are sterile abscesses that break and drain. Although these are
unsightly, one that breaks and drains from just under the skin is far less likely to cause a problem than one that has to break and
drain from deep in a muscle.)
- Pull back on plunger before administration - make sure you are not in a vein. (Even a small amount of vaccine can cause reactions
when given in a vein or artery. If the animal jumps around, re-check your position)
- Administer in a clean site. ZEN of vaccination: Part the fibre - "see the site - be the site"
- Avoid using multi dose syringes - These are far more likely to cause a problem because of contamination
- Store vaccine correctly - usually in a refrigerator, at minimum cool dark place. Absolutely follow label storage directions. Do
you know your supplier - was the vaccine shipped correctly, stored correctly, how close to the "out of date" date is the vial, etc.
You get what you pay for
- Talk to your vet - have a plan to deal with vaccine reactions. Plans do no good when they are made after the fact. Discuss risk
assessments to decide what vaccines are "critical", which ones are "optional", and which are "not needed"
- There are no labelled vaccines for camelids, so ALL vaccines are used extra label. You assume the risk in giving them. I feel
comfortable in saying that far more camelids have been helped by vaccines than have ever been hurt by them, but that does not mean
that there are any guarantees

Article written by David E Anderson, Head & Associate Professor
Farm Animal Surgery Ohio State University , College of Veterinary Medicine www.icinfo.org
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