Vaccination

Cards (18)

  • What can vaccination prevent in an individual?
    Illness
  • What can vaccination prevent in a population?
    The spread of pathogens
  • What role do white blood cells play in the immune system?
    They produce antibodies against pathogens
  • What do antibodies do when they encounter pathogens?
    They stick to pathogens and trigger destruction
  • How do vaccines work?
    By introducing dead or inactive pathogens
  • What is a key point about the pathogens used in vaccines?
    They cannot lead to disease in the patient
  • What happens to white blood cells after vaccination?
    They produce antibodies and divide by mitosis
  • How long can copies of white blood cells stay in the blood?
    For decades
  • What happens if the same pathogen enters the body years later?
    White blood cells produce antibodies quickly
  • How do vaccines protect us from infection?
    By stimulating antibody production against pathogens
  • What does the graph in the video show about antibody levels?
    Antibody levels rise quickly after pathogen invasion
  • Why is it important for a large number of people to be vaccinated?
    To protect unvaccinated individuals through herd immunity
  • What is herd immunity?
    Protection of unvaccinated individuals by vaccinated ones
  • Who might not get vaccinated?
    People new to a country or missing appointments
  • What happens to an unvaccinated person surrounded by vaccinated individuals?
    They cannot catch the disease
  • Where can students find more questions on vaccination?
    In the vision workbook
  • What are the steps involved in how vaccination works?
    • Introduce dead or inactive pathogens
    • White blood cells produce antibodies
    • White blood cells divide by mitosis
    • Memory cells remain for long-term immunity
  • What are the implications of herd immunity in a population?
    • Protects unvaccinated individuals
    • Reduces disease spread
    • Requires high vaccination rates