I don't think so.
There have been few deaths occurring shortly after chickenpox vaccine and reported to the CDC's vaccine complication reporting service. The deaths found to be associated with chickenpox vaccine are typically in patients who were immunocompromised and should not have received the vaccine.
There is no known vaccination for the virus yet. Only experimental procedures have been used.
So far it hasn't been found. There are drugs that help, but the vaccine hasn't been found yet.
If you're thirteen or older, you can get the second chickenpox vaccine as long as it's been at least 28 days since the last one. For patients under thirteen, they must wait three months minimum until the second vaccine.
The vaccine has traditionally been given as an MMR (measles, mumps, ruebella) series in infants.
There have been none to date. However, pregnant women should not take the Gardasil vaccination becasue it is a new vaccine and all the data are not in yet. There have been limited studies on pregnant women taking it, and for now it seems to be safe, but is not recommended. Pregnant women should wait until after the birth of their child before having the vaccine. If you find out you are pregnant after taking a dose of the vaccine, wait until after the baby is born to have the other doses.
In 1955, a vaccine was developed that used weakened forms of the virus. This vaccine and the subsequent Sabin vaccine nearly wiped out polio in the world
For the Gardasil vaccine, the schedule is a series of three. The second shot should be given no sooner than two months after the first, and the third no sooner than four months after the second. There is no need to restart the series if you are late getting any of the shots, no matter how long it's been.
trip them
TB vaccine is a live attenuated vaccine (LAV). This type of vaccine prepared from living micro-organisms (viruses, bacteria currently available) that have been weakened under laboratory conditions.LAV vaccines will replicate in a vaccinated individual and produce an immune response but usually cause a mild or no disease.
MCV (meningococcal conjugate vaccine)
A vaccine