Biology, asked by prithvi08, 1 year ago

what is the importance of vaccination

Answers

Answered by shereef4me
10

There has been some confusion and misunderstandings about vaccines. But vaccination is a very important part of family and public health. Vaccines prevent the spread of contagious, dangerous, and even deadly diseases. These include measles, polio, mumps, chicken pox, whooping cough, diphtheria, and HPV.

The first true vaccine discovered was the smallpox vaccine. Smallpox was a deadly illness a century ago. It killed 300 million to 500 million people around the world in the 20th century alone. The vaccine was given to many people. The disease was eventually erased from the earth. It is the only disease to be completely destroyed. There are now others close to that point. These include polio and mumps. Without the smallpox vaccine, many more people would surely die. Instead, we don’t even need to be vaccinated for it anymore. This is what vaccines can do.

Answered by satyambro
17
vaccination helps a healthy person to be prevented from any disease that the vaccination is given it is given by the same type of weakend microorganism

hope it helps you

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