There are many ways that differ from disease to disease for these diseases. Quarantine is often effective for many of these. Typhoid can often be prevented by improving sanitation of food and water supplies.
However the way that is universally effective for all of these is vaccination. Of course a different vaccine must be prepared and administered for each.
Small pox Typhoid influenza polio measles mumps
A vaccine for polio is specifically for polio and not for chickenpox. No more than trying to say that a hamburger is a salad.
Tuberculosis , chicken pox , polio , rabies , influenza , lyme , mumps , measles , pertussis ,
She was diagnosed with Tuberculosis
flu
Polio is not curable at the last stage.... it can only be prevented and not cured.
Chickenpox, measles, and polio are viral infections don't have medications that cure at this time. If someone gets one of these infections, they get supportive care to help with symptoms until the immune system works to resolve the infection.
Flu, chicken pox, measles, rubella, diphtheria, polio, bird flu, Swine Flu, tuberculosis, pneumonia, typhoid, hepatitis A and B and other types, bacillary dysentery, amebiasis are but few examples of the Infectious Diseases.
Flu, chicken pox, measles, rubella, diphtheria, polio, bird flu, swine flu, tuberculosis, pneumonia, typhoid, hepatitis A and B and other types, bacillary dysentery, amebiasis are but few examples of the infectious diseases.
All parents should have their children vaccinated for polio. Polio is a devastating disease, and there is no cure, but with the vaccination, it can be prevented.
Several diseases can, a few are: typhoid, HIV/AIDS, polio, etc.
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.