Microbiology and Immunology 3820A Lecture 6: Lecture 6 - Vaccines

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Most effective ways to prevent infectious diseases: prevent transmission, prevent infection. Vaccination to elicit immune response. Vaccination is intentional exposure to pathogenic antigens in a form that cannot cause disease (innocuous) Purpose to develop long- term protection against a disease- causing pathogen. Vaccinated persona mounts a memory immune response to same pathogen more protective response. Her immunity fails when vaccinations rates fall below critical thresholds in the community (80%) Vaccines work? controlled 14 major infections disease (small pox, tetanus, rabies, rubella etc. Small box eradicated in 1980. Polio 1988 who campaign, 99% reduction, eradicated in. Some challenges with vaccines availability to underdeveloped coutries vaccine safety fears/public trust. The uk mmr vaccine controversy (1998- present) Dr. wakefield claims the mmr vaccine causes autism. Study was a fraud" committed an elaborate fraud by faking data. Result: decrease in immunization rates and increase infections. Reported cases of measles, mumps and rubella in us from 1966 to 2010. 99% of mmr was eliminated.

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