Vaccination: Why and When Should It Be Given?: Submitted By: Hana Esmayil Class XII - N
Vaccination: Why and When Should It Be Given?: Submitted By: Hana Esmayil Class XII - N
Vaccination: Why and When Should It Be Given?: Submitted By: Hana Esmayil Class XII - N
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BONAFIDE CERTIFICATE
Examiner’s Signature:
Venue:
Date:
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I would like to express my special thanks of gratitude
to my teacher Mrs. Vijayalakshmi as well as our
principal Mrs. Hameeda Kader who gave me the
golden opportunity to do this wonderful project on the
topic “Vaccination: Why and when should it be
given?”, which also helped me in doing a lot of
Research and I came to know about so many new
things I am really thankful to them.
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INDEX
1. Introduction
3. Types of vaccines
4. When to vaccinate?
7. Conclusion
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INTRODUCTION
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HOW VACCINE WORKS?
A vaccine works by training the immune system to
recognize and combat pathogens, either viruses or
bacteria. To do this, certain molecules from the
pathogen must be introduced into the body to trigger
an immune response. These molecules are
called antigens, and they are present on all viruses
and bacteria. By injecting these antigens into the
body, the immune system can safely learn to
recognize them as hostile invaders, produce
antibodies, and remember them for the future. If the
bacteria or virus reappears, the immune system will
recognize the antigens immediately and attack
aggressively well before the pathogen can spread and
cause sickness.
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lymphocytes, as well as B-lymphocytes that will
remember how to fight that disease in the future.
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become so low even people who aren't immunized
benefit. Essentially, a bacteria or virus simply won't
have enough eligible hosts to establish a foothold
and will eventually die out entirely. This
phenomenon is called "herd immunity" or
"community immunity," and it has allowed once-
devastating diseases to be eliminated entirely,
without needing to vaccinate every individual.
This is critical because there will always be a
percentage of the population that cannot be
vaccinated, including infants, young children, the
elderly, people with severe allergies, pregnant
women, or people with compromised immune
systems. Thanks to herd immunity, these people are
kept safe because diseases are never given a chance
to spread through a population.
Public health officials and scientists continue to
study herd immunity and identify key thresholds,
but one telling example is the country of Gambia,
where a vaccination rate of just 70% of the
population was enough to eliminate Hib disease
entirely.
However, if too many people forgo vaccinations, herd
immunity can break down, opening up the
population to the risk of outbreaks. That is why
many officials and doctors consider widespread
immunization a public health imperative and blame
recent disease outbreaks on a lack of vaccination.
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TYPES OF VACCINES
The key to vaccines is injecting the antigens into the
body without causing the person to get sick at the
same time. Scientists have developed several ways of
doing this, and thus we have the following types of
vaccines available:
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and cause sickness. Additionally, these vaccines
must be refrigerated at all times so the weakened
pathogen doesn't die.
Specific Vaccines:
Measles
Mumps
Rubella (MMR combined vaccine)
2. Inactivated Vaccines:
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Specific Vaccines:
Polio (IPV)
3. Subunit/conjugate Vaccines:
Specific Vaccines:
Hepatitis B
Haemophilus Influenzae Type B (Hib)
Pertussis (part of DTaP combined immunization)
4. Toxoid Vaccines:
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Some bacterial diseases damage the body by
secreting harmful chemicals or toxins. For these
bacteria, scientists are able to "deactivate" some of
the toxins using a mixture of formaldehyde and
water. These dead toxins are then safely injected into
the body. The immune system learns well enough
from the dead toxins to fight off living toxins, should
they ever make an appearance.
Specific Vaccines:
Diphtheria
Tetanus
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WHEN TO VACCINATE?
The National Immunization Schedule is a schedule
of vaccines that are offered as part of the Universal
Immunization Program (UIP).
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The schedule recommended by the National
Immunization Schedule is as follows:
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COMMON DISEASES
PREVENTED BY VACCINATION
1. Tuberculosis:
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2. Polio:
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3. Diphtheria:
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4. Pertussis:
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5. Tetanus:
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6. Hepatitis B:
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7. Measles:
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8. Mumps:
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9. Rubella:
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10. Typhoid:
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CURRENT WORLDWIDE
AFFAIRS
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CONCLUSION
Vaccines are the perfect defense against a
preventable and contagious disease that can be
deadly.
Vaccines save millions of lives every year. When a
particular section of a city or town is immunized
against a communicable disease, several members of
the same community are shielded against the
diseases as the opportunity for an outbreak is
minimum.
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