Vaccination Argumentative Essay

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Vaccinations are a controversial topic in the world today, and a continual debated by many in society. Many feel that it is the cause of several developmental diseases in our young children. Vaccination discovery have helped us protect many people from deadly diseases. Many believe that it is the moral and ethical to be vaccinated, but many wouldn’t agree.
What is a vaccine and where did it come from? The first vaccine was introduced by English country doctor Edward Jenner in in 1796. Jenner create an immunity to smallpox, by removing material from cowpox, a viral disease of cows. Most of the nineteenth century, the smallpox vaccine was the only vaccine. However, by the beginning of the twentieth century, researchers had developed vaccines …show more content…

Vaccines greatly reduce the risk of infection by working with the body’s natural defenses to safely develop immunity to diseases, by helping develop immunity by imitating infections. Our body is at constant war with pathogens and free radicals that invade our bodies. When we get an infections white cells; B-lymphocytes, T-lymphocytes, and macrophages attack the infection. The cells then learn and remember how to protect itself from infections it has fought off (CDC 2016). Vaccines accelerate this process before the body can be infected, it’s like a doom prepper preparing for Armageddon.
Furthermore, the greater purpose of vaccines is to completely eliminate infections that surround us. The only way to beat these infection is to continue vaccinations as a preventative method. Ultimately, scientists are in pursuit to create a better tomorrow for our children. (We like to think). Consequently, children is where the vaccine debate becomes something more than what it is meant to be. Navin, M. argues that the concerns vaccine refusers express about ‘safety’ are sometimes not examples of vaccine denialism. Instead, concerns about vaccine ‘safety’ may sometimes be motivated by a commitment to ‘natural’ forms of bodily purity (including the avoidance of ‘unnatural’ contaminants), and such a commitment is often fueled by both moralized and non-moralized forms of disgust

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