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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Canine and feline core vaccinations: US veterinarians' concerns and perceived impact of COVID-19 antivaccination views on veterinary medicine.

Journal:
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
Year:
2022
Authors:
Kogan, Lori R & Rishniw, Mark
Affiliation:
College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences · United States

Plain-English summary

A recent study looked at how veterinarians in the U.S. feel about vaccines for dogs and cats, especially in light of concerns related to COVID-19 and vaccine hesitancy. Over 1,300 veterinarians shared their thoughts through a survey. They expressed worries about potential side effects from vaccines, like severe allergic reactions and soreness at the injection site, while pet owners often voiced concerns about the necessity of vaccines, especially for pets that stay indoors, and fears about long-term health issues or costs. The study found that more pet owners are hesitant about vaccines since the COVID-19 vaccine discussions began, suggesting that attitudes toward human vaccines may influence how people feel about vaccinating their pets. Overall, the findings highlight a gap between what veterinarians worry about and what pet owners are concerned about, indicating a need for better communication to encourage vaccination.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Assess US veterinarians' perceptions regarding vaccine concerns (their own and owners') and the association between owners' vaccine concerns and COVID-19 antivaccination sentiments. SAMPLE: Members of the Veterinary Information Network. PROCEDURES: An electronic survey distributed via the Veterinary Information Network data collection portal. RESULTS: 1,341 US veterinarians completed the survey. Top veterinarian concerns for vaccinating a healthy adult dog were anaphylaxis, soreness at injection site, and lethargy; for cats, these concerns included vaccine-associated sarcoma, lethargy, and soreness at injection site. Veterinarians reported that the most common concerns mentioned by owners included that the pet does not go outside, that vaccinations are unnecessary, that vaccinations can lead to chronic or severe illness, and cost. Veterinarians reported an increased number of dog and cat owners reluctant about or resistant to the idea of rabies vaccines and core vaccines since the time that COVID-19 vaccines became widely available. There was an association between veterinarians' perceptions of local COVID-19 antivaccination sentiments and the increase in the number of vaccine-resistant or -concerned clients. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: There appears to be little overlap between veterinarians' primary concerns related to vaccinations and their perception of dog and cat owners' primary concerns. The fact that the number of resistant clients is positively associated with the presence of veterinarians' perceptions of a local COVID-19 antivaccination sentiment suggests that human antivaccination sentiments impact pet owners' views of companion animal vaccinations. A better understanding of the cognitive biases that impact owners' vaccine decisions can help veterinarians better communicate with vaccine-reluctant clients and increase vaccination compliance rates.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35905158/