the answer is no.
Franz Seitz has written: 'Diphtherie und Croup' -- subject(s): Diphtheria, Croup
No there was not a vaccination
1950's The first polio vaccine, called the Salk vaccine, was developed by Jonas Salk and became available in 1955. In 1962 the Sabin or oral vaccine developed by Albert Sabin became available.
he invented vaccine againest viral hepatitis
The first vaccine against rabies (by Louis Pasteur).
No, they only will work on the exact type(s) of flu that the vaccine is made to prevent. In the US, the seasonal flu vaccine contains the antigen for three different types of flu each year that are chosen as the mostly likely to be spreading during that season. If there are very similar strains circulating, the vaccine can sometimes provide some carry over protection to the similar ones, but you can only count on protection from the exact types included in the vaccines.
like three ways of injection of a vaccine, when a drug enters in the body its action depends upon type of vaccine that either it is i/v or s/c or i/m.i/v vaccine action is quik enough but it further depends upon the manufacturing of a vaccine either it will be manufactured with oil or it will be made in aquous medium. my answer needs the procedure of drug/vaccine to go ahead inside the body.
For such a reply, you may go: "The Demon Has Left Your Daughter."
The full form for the TABC vaccine is typhoid A, Typhoid B, and cholera. This might be given to someone traveling to an area with serious sanitation issues.
Samuel Etinde Crompton has written: 'The polio vaccine' -- subject(s): Poliomyelitis, Poliomyelitis vaccine, Juvenile literature, Public health, History 'The Mohawk' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, Mohawk Indians, History
typhim is a commercial name of typhoid vaccine Typhim Vi®, Typhoid Vi Polysaccharide Vaccine, produced by Sanofi Pasteur SA, for intramuscular use, is a sterile solution containing the cell surface Vi polysaccharide extracted from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi, S typhi Ty2 strain.
On May 14, 1796I think that it was in 1800's I'm not sure