Vaccinating Foals

While it's a little early in the foaling season, it never hurts to think about vaccination plans for foals. Vaccination is an important part of the disease prevention program - but it's only one part... general infection control practices are as, or often even more, important. Vaccination of foals is not the same as vaccination of adult horses. Foals may be more or less susceptible to certain infections. They may have greater or lower risks of exposure, and they may respond differently to vaccines.

There is no standard vaccination program for foals. Specific vaccination programs need to be designed for each horse on each farm based on risk of exposure and infection, cost and many other factors. Your veterinarian can help you determine what your animals should be vaccinated against. When it comes to foals, here are some important things to considered:

  • Foals typically need to be vaccinated several times to get the desired immune response. There are at least a couple of reasons for this. First, if a foal has high antibody levels from colostrum, it may not respond properly to the vaccine until those antibodies are used up. These antibody levels drop over time, but the rate and timing of the drop is different for each foal. Vaccinating the foal several times (at appropriate intervals) helps reduce the risk of vaccine failure from colostral antibodies. Second, foals are born with a fully functional immune system, but the immune response to an infectious agent or vaccine is slow and low the first time an individual encounters it. The first dose of vaccine may produce some response, but a much higher response is generated with boosters.  This is actually true of adult horses as well.
  • Over-vaccination can be a problem. Vaccination too early and/or too frequently could actually result in a decreased immune response or complete vaccine failure, a phenomenon known as immune tolerance. So, giving many doses of vaccine starting at a very young age may actually be counter-productive. This is probably a bigger concern with influenza vaccination compared to other vaccines.

Talk to your veterinarian about vaccination. Over-, under- and improper vaccination can lead to increased disease risks, plus wasted time and money.

Guidelines for vaccination of foals have been developed by the American Association of Equine Practitioners. These are also available from the link on the equIDblog Resources page.

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