Antibiotics or vaccines. I think...
No. Vaccines are not used for treatment. They are used as prevention.
Vaccines are great for this. Some vaccines distribute inactive bacteria into your body so that your white blood cells can learn to recognize them. This prevents you from getting whatever disease the bacteria cause. Sometimes, however, it is not safe to introduce bacteria to the body like that. In situations like that, I think it would be best to take antibiotics.
Vaccines are great for this. Some vaccines distribute inactive bacteria into your body so that your white blood cells can learn to recognize them. This prevents you from getting whatever disease the bacteria cause. Sometimes, however, it is not safe to introduce bacteria to the body like that. In situations like that, I think it would be best to take antibiotics.
A vaccines helps because they put some of the disease in your body then your body can get use to it so if you get that disease your body can easily fight it out of you!
Rheumatism is rheumatoid arthritis and is an immunological disease affecting the bones/joints and is not an infectious disease. It can be genetically passed down through families. It is an extremely painful and debilitating disease with no cure. There are very expensive drugs to help alleviate symptoms. There are no drugs to prevent the disease and no vaccines for this immunological disease. There are some people who believe environmental chemicals or other things cause the disease but that has not been proven.
Being more carefully designed makes less mess-ups possible
Yes, some can. Some vaccines are safe in pregnancy, and others are not. Your doctor can tell you what vaccines are right for you before, during and after pregnancy.
Some vaccines are really just a weakened form of the disease. These are called attenuated vaccines.
The only medical treatments available are used to relieve the symptoms of flu, NOT to cure the disease - you cannot cure flu. Flu vaccine, like all vaccines is a prophylactic - it stops you getting flu. All vaccines of all types are based on the virus they are used against or some very closely related virus that the body regards as identical - some vaccines are dead, some are weakened (attenuated) so that they do not cause disease.
because some of them may be harmful to the body
No, not all infections necessarily cause disease. Infections occur when microorganisms such as bacteria, viruses, or fungi invade the body, but the body's immune system may sometimes successfully fight off the infection without any symptoms of illness. In some cases, the body can harbor certain microorganisms without causing any harm or disease.