Science, asked by praveenmetha78, 10 months ago

Vaccines Are made up of

Answers

Answered by Arnav799
10

Answer:

Killed (inactivated) vaccines are made from a protein or other small pieces taken from a virus or bacteria.

Explanation:

Answered by Anonymous
7

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Although most attenuated vaccines are viral, some are bacterial in nature. Examples include the viral diseases yellow fever, measles, mumps, and rubella, and the bacterial disease typhoid.

“China is currently producing nearly all of the commonly-used vaccines for viral diseases such as influenza, measles, rabies (for humans), mumps, rotavirus, hepatitis A and B and for bacterial diseases, including typhoid, tetanus and diphtheria,” says Dr Xu Ming, Vice President of the China Chamber of Commerce for .

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