an oncologist told me to question whether annual is really necessary and not to have them vaccinated between the shoulder blades as if a lump did develop, it's really difficult to remove
only one cat in 32,000 develops a ftbrosarcoma.
But we must not lose sight of the risk-benefit ratio. The risk of potentially fatal disease is much higher in an unvaccinated or improperly vaccinated cat than is the risk of a fatal reaction or tumor.
I find it interesting that vets dismiss the side effects of the FeLV jab, yet quite a lot of rescue people have seen them.
I appreciate what you say and that some people may have seen some side effects however, as previously posted I myself have seen a vast reduction in the number of FeLV cases since more and more owners have taken up the opportunity to vaccinate. I personally feel that the side effects of a few (although I personally have not known any) are worth it if tens of thousands of little ones are saved
The Cats Protection Vets advice is:-
Vaccination is generally a safe procedure that has substantially reduced the incidence of serious disease within the feline population. Side effects are rare, especially in view of the thousands of doses that are administered every year, and we feel the risk of a reaction outweighs the protection that the vaccination provides.
I think this again is one of those topics where we have to agree to disagree. All we can do is post what we actually know as fact and our own personal experience and then let people decide for themselves which way to go.