essay on immunization and its uses for 10th std students
Answers
Answered by
2
Hey dude.....✌
here is ur answer.....✌
Vaccination (protective inoculation) is a process by which specific antibodies are either developed or infected to a normal man to immune the body from specific disease caused due to pathogens.
Vaccination (protective inoculation) is a process by which specific antibodies are either developed or infected to a normal man to immune the body from specific disease caused due to pathogens.The process of introduction of vaccine into an individual to provide protection against a particular disease is called vaccination.
Vaccination (protective inoculation) is a process by which specific antibodies are either developed or infected to a normal man to immune the body from specific disease caused due to pathogens.The process of introduction of vaccine into an individual to provide protection against a particular disease is called vaccination.These vaccines (inactivated or weakened pathogen) generate primary immune response (i.e. memory B & T cells) which attack the pathogens.
Edward Jenner the “Father of Immunology” (1749-1823), conceived the idea of vaccination when he observed that the milkmaids did not suffer from small pox, a dreaded disease, as they were exposed to a milder form of this disease called cowpox. So he proposed that an induced mild form of a disease would protect a person from a virulent form (which can cause more damage to the host).
Edward Jenner the “Father of Immunology” (1749-1823), conceived the idea of vaccination when he observed that the milkmaids did not suffer from small pox, a dreaded disease, as they were exposed to a milder form of this disease called cowpox. So he proposed that an induced mild form of a disease would protect a person from a virulent form (which can cause more damage to the host).He termed it as vaccine (Latin-Vacca means “Cow”) and vaccination for protective inoculation. Jenner, the county doctor, experimented this concept successfully on a healthy body named James Philips in 1796 and could save thousands of people from his discovery. Nearly after a century, Lewis Pasteur (1881) succeeded in producing vaccines for anthrax, rabies (hydrophobia). Victims of bites by rabid dogs are now immunized by a series of injections called pasteur treatment.
Hope this helps u ✌☺
#sharanaya❤✌☺
Answered by
0
Vaccination protects children from serious illness and complications of vaccine-preventable diseases which can include amputation of an arm or leg, paralysis of limbs, hearing loss, convulsions, brain damage, and death. Vaccine-preventable diseases, such as measles, mumps, and whooping cough, are still a threat.
Similar questions