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Welcome to KEL Browser-vaccine page.
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Few scientific discoveries have had the impact on the
health of the world as have vaccines. The ability to routinely
immunize children against many childhood diseases saves millions of
lives annually. It has been two hundred years since a country doctor
from England named Edward Jenner first discovered a way to vaccinate
against the most dreaded disease of that time, smallpox. On May 14,
1796, Jenner applied the first vaccine by using cowpox to immunize
James Phipps against smallpox.
A French
chemist, Dr. Louis Pasteur, previously noted for his studies of
fermentation and bacteria, disproved the theory of spontaneous
generation and advanced the germ theory of infection.
Pasteur
was able to prove that protection against disease could be afforded
by the infection of weakened germs which cause silent and relatively
harmless infections. The milestone in immunization for which Pasteur
is most noted occurred in 1885. A boy named Joseph Meister was
bitten by a rabid dog and, for the first time in history, was
successfully treated with a vaccine that prevented the development
of rabies

Antibody
Definition:
A substance that fights a disease by protecting the
body from a virus or bacteria.
Context:
Vaccines cause the body to develop antibodies to fight a
disease.
A vaccine is made from the antigen—either a bacteria or a virus—that
causes the disease. Some vaccines use live but weakened versions of
the antigen.
A
vaccine does not contain enough of antigens to cause the disease. It
has just enough to trigger the body’s immune system to produce
antibodies against that disease. In most cases, these antibodies
remain active and protective against the disease for a person’s
lifetime. This protection is called immunity. In some cases, a
vaccine requires booster shots, doses given at regular intervals.
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