Measles, mulmps, rubella (MMR vaccine), smallpox, and polio have all been virtually eradicated by consistent vaccine use.
Vaccines don't kill viruses or diseases; they prevent disease before you are infected.
Measles, mumps, rubella, polio, chicken pox, influenza are a few.
Vaccines do not "cure" diseases, but they can prevent serious illnesses by helping the body build immunity against specific viruses or bacteria. Some diseases that can be prevented by vaccines include measles, mumps, rubella, polio, influenza, and COVID-19.
Vaccines prevent diseases, medications treat them.
Currently, all vaccines on the market today only exist for diseases caused by viruses- though not all diseases caused by viruses have a corresponding vaccine. Notably, the common cold (rhinoviruses) and AIDS (HIV) have no vaccines.
None, they are preventatives not cures. A few, like the rabies vaccine can still work after infection but before symptoms appear.
Yes
ppmSmallpox was eradicated by a worldwide campaign carried out the by the World Health Organization.Polio, measels, mumps, rubella, whooping cough, tetanus,swine flu are examples of diseases that can be eliminated in countries that provide the vaccines.It was Smallpox.Smallpox
No, not at this point in time.
true.
In hope to prevent diseases.
diseases eradication is very difficult but pox (variole in french) has been eradicated