Vaccination provides protection from acute, contagious diseases by inducing chronic disease. Multiple vaccinations, particularly with combination vaccines, are one of the greatest contributors to vaccine-induced illness. Limiting vaccination to one or two doses of appropriately indicated vaccines could greatly reduce disease from vaccination. Even in outdoor cats, vaccines may be unnecessary, as many diseases are not truly contagious. Organisms that fit this category include feline leukemia virus, feline infectious peritonitis virus, feline immunodeficiency virus, and ringworm (in most cases). Vaccines might actually cause disease. Cardiomyopathy is an autoimmune disease, and vaccines are major causes of autoimmune disease. The disease did not exist. Vaccines could be responsible for it. Cats suffer greatly from vaccination damage. The vaccines that are implicated are the rabies and feline leukemia virus vaccines. The diseases are serious, even life threatening. The vaccines for these diseases are known to be effective and considered safe. One vaccine at four months of age will protect most cats for life. However vaccines for feline leukemia virus, feline infectious peritonitis virus, Chlamydia, ringworm, or the feline immunodeficiency virus are somewhat risky to the cat.
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