Vaccinations

Cards (2)

  • What do vaccinations involve?
    Introducing small quantities of dead or inactive forms of a pathogen into the body. The white blood cells are stimulated to produce antibodies against the dead or inactive pathogen. At the same time, the white blood cell divides by mitosis to produce copies of itself. These copies can stay in the blood for decades. If the same pathogen enters the body, even years later, the white blood cell can produce the correct antibodies quickly. This prevents infection.
  • Why is it important that a very large number of people are vaccinated?
    Because there are always some people that do not get vaccinated, so if enough people are vaccinated, this also protects the unvaccinated people. This means the unvaccinated person cannot catch the disease because nobody around them can pass the pathogen on. This is called herd immunity.