Module 6 Flashcards

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1
Q

Vaccine

A
  • substance that resembles a pathogen in some ways and elicits an immune response, providing protection from disease if the pathogen itself is encountered
  • best strategy to achieve herd immunity
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2
Q

Inoculation

A
  • act of implanting a pathogen in an animal or person, usually to induce immunity from disease
  • people would usually get a milder version of the illness and then be immune
  • risk much less than infected naturally
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3
Q

How do vaccines work

A
  • harnessing body’s natural ability to fight off infectious diseases and remember previous infections
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4
Q

Immune memory

A

an individual’s immune system can remember what pathogens it has previously encountered and fights back faster and stronger with subsequent encounters

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5
Q

Goals of Vaccination

A
  1. Prevent disease in an individual: when a virus takes residence in a person they are infected, they only have disease if they get sick; vaccination aims to prevent the disease if they become exposed or infected
  2. Prevent transmission of the pathogen in the community: vaccination prevents viruses from replicating in our cells; less virus means less transmission in the community- protecting vaccinated and unvaccinated people
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6
Q

Herd immunity

A
  • the more immune people in a community, the less an infectious disease can spread to others in that community
  • herd immunity protects unvaccinated- difficult for disease to spread
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