PashuMate — Empowering Rural Livestock

Brucellosis Vaccine

Brucellosis vaccination helps control abortion storms and zoonotic risk in organised dairy operations.

Brucellosis Vaccine — overview

Brucellosis vaccination helps control abortion storms and zoonotic risk in organised dairy operations.

Vaccination underpins profitable cow, buffalo enterprises across Punjab, Haryana, and neighbouring states. Missed boosters expose herds to production shocks and trade restrictions.

Schedule and timing

Schedule: Calfhood single dose in endemic areas; revaccination per state protocol. Align farm calendars with block camp notifications and private vet visits. Late vaccination still beats no vaccination during regional risk periods.

Record dates in a herd register to avoid accidental gaps when animals are sold or purchased.

Age and dosage

Age guidance: Female calves 4–8 months (before breeding age). Dosage: As per approved RB51 or state-supplied vaccine label. Always follow manufacturer labels and vet instructions for route and storage cold chain.

Damaged vials or warm storage reduce efficacy — handle vaccines carefully.

Benefits for farmers

Documented benefits include: Reduces abortion rates; Lowers human exposure risk on farms.

Herd immunity reduces catastrophic loss and stabilises milk income across seasons.

Storage and handling

Maintain cold chain until administration. Use sterile needles, avoid sun exposure on prepared doses, and dispose sharps safely. Train family labour to recognise post-vaccination fever monitoring steps.

Integration with biosecurity

Vaccination works best with quarantine, visitor control, and clean water. Do not assume vaccines alone eliminate all risk — especially where multiple strains circulate.

Purchasing animals — what to verify

Ask sellers for recent vaccination proof before high-value purchases. If records are missing, plan booster visits with your vet after quarantine.

Related diseases and follow-up reading

Review linked disease articles for symptom recognition. Pair reading with map search for veterinarians near your village.

Government camps and private vets

Many vaccines arrive through government camps at subsidised rates; private vets supplement timing flexibility. Combine both channels for coverage.

Next steps

Mark your calendar, update herd records, and locate a veterinarian on PashuMate if you lack a regular provider. Preventive care is the highest-return input for most dairies.

Schedule
Calfhood single dose in endemic areas; revaccination per state protocol
Age
Female calves 4–8 months (before breeding age)
Dosage
As per approved RB51 or state-supplied vaccine label

Benefits

  • Reduces abortion rates
  • Lowers human exposure risk on farms