Vaccination: Difference between revisions
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==History of vaccination== | ==History of vaccination== | ||
"Edward Jenner vaccinated James Phipps in 1796 with cowpox obtained from a pustule on the hand of the milkmaid, Sarah Nelmes." ( Morgan, A. J.; Parker, S. Translational Mini-Review Series on Vaccines: The Edward Jenner Museum and the history of vaccination Clinical & Experimental Immunology, Volume 147, Number 3, March 2007, pp. 389-394(6)) | |||
==Human vaccinations== | ==Human vaccinations== |
Revision as of 18:51, 13 March 2007
Vaccination is a preventative health measure that can confer immunity to an infectious disease, without requiring that the vaccinated individual actually contracts the disease. Usually, this is carried out with an innoculation, either a weakened form of the infectious agent (called a live vaccine) or a portion of the infectious agent, like an outer coat or internal proteins (called a killed vaccine) are introduced into the body of the individual to be protected. The immune system of that individual responds to the vaccine and, if that response is adequate, exposure to the germ will not result in sickness.
History of vaccination
"Edward Jenner vaccinated James Phipps in 1796 with cowpox obtained from a pustule on the hand of the milkmaid, Sarah Nelmes." ( Morgan, A. J.; Parker, S. Translational Mini-Review Series on Vaccines: The Edward Jenner Museum and the history of vaccination Clinical & Experimental Immunology, Volume 147, Number 3, March 2007, pp. 389-394(6))