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2016 Healthcare worker influenza immunisation program
2016 Healthcare worker influenza immunisation program

... Use the 2016 VICNISS data collection web form available at to submit your data. The Health service must be registered as a VICNISS web form user to be able to submit the influenza data. If you need instruct ...
Allocution de Roy Anderson - 15 juin 2010
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... I started my scientific career as a biologist fascinated with the natural world and in particular with the ecology of the complex life cycles that many parasitic organisms have evolved to exploit their host populations. The disciplines of ecology, and medical or veterinary epidemiology, were very mu ...
Suggested Answers to Discussion topics
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... A full blood workup of the immune system would give a picture of Daniel’s current immune status. Understanding specific immune cell levels would further help in potential treatment modalities. Immunoglobulins, with sub classes, B and T cell counts along with a detailed picture of the CD4 and CD8 lev ...
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... 1. Natural active immunity occurs when lymphocytes produce antibodies in response to the body becoming infected with a pathogen from the environment. 2. Artificial active immunity occurs when lymphocytes produce antibodies in response to the pathogen being administered through vaccination. ...
blood-borne pathogens
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volunteer medical clearance form
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... Volunteer applicants will need one – time dose of TDAP regardless of when previous dose of Td was received. Volunteers will need Td boosters every 10 years thereafter. ...
An Introduction to Vaccine Science and Basic Immunology
An Introduction to Vaccine Science and Basic Immunology

... How vaccines work? Artificial induction of immunological memory Vaccines expose your immune system to recognizable components of pathogens – without the risk of disease – inducing immunological memory that results in a faster, stronger response during the initial encounter with the actual pathogen, ...
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... system triggered by perturbation of the immune response. They do correlate, in animal models, with a spreading of the immune response to different brain proteins but this may simply reflect ongoing inflammation. Other models show that periodic behaviour can arise spontaneously, when the target of th ...
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... The injection of a weakened form of a pathogen, or of a similar but less dangerous pathogen, to produce immunity is known as a ______________. The term comes from the Latin word vacca, meaning “cow,” as a reminder of Jenner’s work. Active immunity may develop as a result of natural exposure to an __ ...
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... (pneumococcal) vaccination, when appropriate, is important for your health. That’s why Oxford offers both vaccines at no cost to Oxford Medicare Advantage® Members *. Medical studies** show that a preventive flu vaccination*** reduces the chance of infection and lessens the severity of symptoms, eve ...
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... what adjuvants do when added to vaccines. Adjuvant agents enhance the immune response that occurs after vaccine administration. Although they have been used extensively in the last 50 years, there has not been a comprehensive veterinary journal review of adjuvant mode of action and selection rationa ...
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How safe and effective is the vaccine?

... Of the 2 billion people who have been infected with the hepatitis B virus (HBV), more than 350 million have chronic (lifelong) infections. These chronically infected persons are at high risk of death from cirrhosis of the liver and liver cancer, diseases that kill about one million persons each year ...
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Vaccination



Vaccination is the administration of antigenic material (a vaccine) to stimulate an individual's immune system to develop adaptive immunity to a pathogen. Vaccines can prevent or ameliorate morbidity from infection. When a sufficiently large percentage of a population has been vaccinated, this results in herd immunity. The effectiveness of vaccination has been widely studied and verified; for example, the influenza vaccine, the HPV vaccine, and the chicken pox vaccine. Vaccination is the most effective method of preventing infectious diseases; widespread immunity due to vaccination is largely responsible for the worldwide eradication of smallpox and the restriction of diseases such as polio, measles, and tetanus from much of the world. The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that licensed vaccines are currently available to prevent or contribute to the prevention and control of twenty-five infections.The active agent of a vaccine may be intact but inactivated (non-infective) or attenuated (with reduced infectivity) forms of the causative pathogens, or purified components of the pathogen that have been found to be highly immunogenic (e.g., outer coat proteins of a virus). Toxoids are produced for immunization against toxin-based diseases, such as the modification of tetanospasmin toxin of tetanus to remove its toxic effect but retain its immunogenic effect.Smallpox was most likely the first disease people tried to prevent by inoculating themselves and was the first disease for which a vaccine was produced. The smallpox vaccine was discovered in 1796 by the British physician Edward Jenner, although at least six people had used the same principles years earlier. Louis Pasteur furthered the concept through his work in microbiology. The immunization was called vaccination because it was derived from a virus affecting cows (Latin: vacca—cow). Smallpox was a contagious and deadly disease, causing the deaths of 20–60% of infected adults and over 80% of infected children. When smallpox was finally eradicated in 1979, it had already killed an estimated 300–500 million people in the 20th century.In common speech, 'vaccination' and 'immunization' have a similar meaning. This distinguishes it from inoculation, which uses unweakened live pathogens, although in common usage either can refer to an immunization. Vaccination efforts have been met with some controversy on scientific, ethical, political, medical safety, and religious grounds. In rare cases, vaccinations can injure people and, in the United States, they may receive compensation for those injuries under the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. Early success and compulsion brought widespread acceptance, and mass vaccination campaigns have greatly reduced the incidence of many diseases in numerous geographic regions.
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