The propose of vaccination is to trigger the immune system and help it recognize a disease organism.
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immune system
vaccination is a vaccine that stimulate your immune system to develop adaptive immunity to disease.
Vaccines stimulates the immune system to make antibodies
Antigen is a component of the immune system. It can trigger an immune response in the body by interacting with antibodies or immune cells.
Vaccination is the process of attempting to confer artificial immunity on an individual organism by exposing the immune system to antigens of the pathogen being vaccinated against. Vaccination does not provide nearly as good protection as natural, or acquired immunity.
The vaccination process is intended to boost the immune system against infectious diseases and similar problems by introducing a small quantity of the disease to the immune system, so it knows what to look for and how to fight it. However, vaccination does not make you immune, so always exercise as much caution as possible in a situation in which you might be at risk of contracting an infectious disease.
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No. Hapten is an antigen whic has low molecular weight and does not trigger immune system.
This process is called vaccination. It involves introducing a weakened or inactive form of a pathogen into the body to stimulate the immune system to produce an immune response. This prepares the immune system to recognize and fight off the real pathogen if the person is exposed to it in the future.
Vaccinations work by strengthening one's immune system. Professional doctors, with a certificate, insert some of the virus or bacteria so your immune system can get immune to fight it off. Children, in my opinion, must get a vaccination so they don't die really young. Elders and adults, that is up to them.
In short, a vaccination prevents you from catching a particular sickness. Vaccinations allow the immune system to become better prepared for a certain antigen (foreign invader) by giving it a "target" (usually a weaker or deaden strain of the antigen) to practice on. During the immune response to the vaccination, the body's supply of antibodies (and the B cells that produce it) is drastically increased. Should the vaccinated person encounter the antigen after vaccination, his/her immune system will be well prepared to put up a good fight. This is true for any effective vaccination against any antigen.