If you vaccinate people against diseases, it saves money and resources treating them if they were to actually fall ill with the sickness.
Also, it safeguards the health of the majority of a population, and can totally wipe out some diseases.
No, there is no reason to get chickenpox vaccine if you've had shingles. You should talk with your health care provider about shingles vaccine.
Deaths and pneumonia have decreased as much as 90% since the start using the vaccine. That is surely one reason to get these each year.
Having a cold without a fever is not a reason to avoid giving a vaccine. Vaccines, however, do not prevent or treat colds.
If a pregnant woman mistakenly gets the MMR vaccine or conceive within days of getting the vaccine, she should be counseled about the potential theoretical risks to the fetus. Getting the vaccine is not enough ground to terminating the pregnancy. Pregnancy registry of 324 pregnant women who got the vaccine did not show any terotegenicity to the fetus. No baby reported any adverse events due to the vaccine
You can't without bleeding yourself to death - a vaccine is injected into your bloodstream or muscle mass. If you have a serious medical reason why you cannot be vaccinated you should tell your doctor before any attempt is made to vaccinate you. Medical science supports the use of vaccinations.
yes DNA vaccine is a type of subunit vaccine and is also knwon as recombinant vaccine
Yes, shingles vaccine is recommended for patients 60 and over whether they remember having chickenpox or not (see related link). You still could get shingles even if you don't remember having chickenpox.
Yes. The cholera vaccine is a killed vaccine.
interval- flu vaccine and the shingles vaccine
the vaccine is given to children is a peadiatric vaccine.
Chickenpox vaccine is not intramuscular. It is a subcutaneous vaccine.
A Sabin vaccine is a polio vaccine, taken orally.