Pneumococcal, Influenza, Measles, Mumps, Rubella, Vericella, Hepatitis A, and Meningococcal are all the vaccines a child should get at age 2. These vaccines are to prevent your child from getting these illnesses and from passing them along.
Measles, mumps, rubella, polio, chicken pox, influenza are a few.
This is a list of only a few of the infectious diseases that vaccines have been developed to prevent: influenza, polio, measles, mumps, rubella, pneumonia, hepatitis A, hepatitis B, human papillomavirus (HPV), chickenpox, diphtheria, rotavirus, tetanus, and pertussis.
The best way to prevent meningitis is to be vaccinated against it. Both Haemophilus influenza type B and Pneumococcal vaccines prevent meningitis.
Live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) is a type of influenza vaccine in the form of a nasal spray that used to be recommended to prevent influenza.
Vaccines prevent only the infectious diseases that they were made to prevent. For example, a vaccine for one type of flu will prevent that type of flu, but you may still get other types if you are not also vaccinated for them. This is why the seasonal flu vaccine usually contains vaccine for the three most likely types of flu that are expected to circulate at the next flu season. There are vaccines for the various types of influenza, for other viral diseases like measles, mumps and polio and for a very limited number of bacterial disease such as one common type of bacterial pneumonia. See the related questions below for more information about how vaccines work.
You can prevent mumps by getting a vacine shot when your young.
You can prevent mumps by getting a vacine shot when your young.
There are different kinds of triple antigen vaccines. A triple antigen vaccine is one made with three different antigens (often three virus strains). The seasonal flu vaccines are examples of triple antigen vaccines, because they contain vaccines against the three influenza viruses most prominent and most likely to spread that season. These are also called Triple Valent or Trivalent vaccines. Another example is the MMR trivalent vaccine made to vaccinate against Measles, Mumps, and Rubella. Several of the childhood vaccinations are this type of trivalent vaccine.
The US State Department requires these vaccines to obtain a visa: Acellular pertussis Hepatitis A Hepatitis B Human papillomavirus (HPV) Influenza Influenza type b (Hib) Measles Meningococcal Mumps Pneumococcal Pertussis Polio Rotovirus Tetanus and diphtheria toxoids Varicella Zoster
No, they are made from the virus
typhus, dysentery, measles, mumps and influenza