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Q: You had a booster for whooping cough and polio 6 weeks ago when can you try to fall pregnant?
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What vaccinations do kids have when aged twelve and under?

Polio, diptheria, whooping cough, tetnas, german measels and a booster in South Africa. This depends on the country you live in.


What were common diseases in 1914-1918?

polio, TB, whooping cough


What are the six childhood killer disease in Ghana?

measles,tetanus,polio,tuberculosis,whooping cough and diptheria


List 5 microbial diseases and the antibiotic used for treatment?

DISEASE ANTIBIOTIC USED measles mmr (measles mump rubella) polio polio drops whooping cough dpt(deptheria petruesis tetanus)


What is one disease most children are vaccinated against?

Smallpox and polio. There are several other diseases that are vaccinated against - whooping cough to name just one.


What is one disease most children vaccinated against?

Smallpox and polio. There are several other diseases that are vaccinated against - whooping cough to name just one.


What are some diseases that are school aproprete and can do for a health project that are easy to do?

for k-12 projects try any disease that children get vacinated for like polio, whooping cough, rubella, mumps, measles, chicken pox, small pox etc


What was the mystery about the polio virus that had to be solved before a vaccine could be developed?

This question seems to be from a unit about Henrietta Lacks' cells.There are many polio viruses that have no effect on humans. Her cells (HeLa) allowed the growth of polio viruses and made it possible to determine which strain produced the devastating effects. When that was determined, the vaccine could be made.Vaccines are not limited to viruses. Some of the bacterial diseases for which there are vaccines include: tuberculosis, meningitis, tetanus, whooping cough, typhoid, cholera, anthrax, etc.


What disease is caused by microbes?

Sleeping sickness Leishmaniasis Chgas West Neil Cryptosporidium Venereal diseases Anthrax leprosy Diphtheria Mononucleosis Rabies Measles Trichinosis Smallpox Botulism TB Whooping cough Common colds Yellow fever Polio AIDS Malaria Tick fever Pin worms


What is the number one disease from New Zealand?

Well we are a first world country, so there isn't too much we have to worry about. We get immunisations against Diphtheria, Tetanus, Whooping cough, Polio, Hepatitis B/Haemophilus influenzae, Pneumococcal, Measles, Mumps, Rubella, Tetanus, etc, throughout our life time. I guess meningitis would be one of the bigger risks, and we get immunised against that too.


Benefits of animal experimentation?

please more informationPros: We can find out more about what will help/hurt us. We can develop more medicine. We can save lives and stop bad reactions happening to humans.Cons: It is sometimes cruel to the animals. It can kill and hurt the animals very badly.


How polio is spread?

Polio is transmitted, most commonly, through fecal matter and saliva.