Why The Importance Of Vaccine

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Vaccines were invented to protect the population from potential deadly diseases. A person is injected with a weakened or dead form of the infectious pathogen which triggers an immune response that will produce memory T lymphocytes. These T cells are what the immunity is made of and protects a person if the pathogen would re-enter their system. Gaining immunity through a vaccine, while it can cause some unpleasant symptoms, does not put the person in a life or death situation. Requiring the vaccination of young children is important to protect not only the individual, but society as a whole. When parents vaccinate their children, they are protecting them from an enemy that they cannot see. The immune system is a highly effective and important …show more content…

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Each individual has a responsibility to take care of their neighbor. As said by John Donne in his poem, No Man is an Island, no man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, one cannot live without effecting others which is why the health of the whole is more important than the rights on the …show more content…

The “scientific proof” that this link was once true has since been thrown out and the researcher has been stripped of the Ph.D. In light of the link to autism, the Center for Disease Control performed extensive studies on eight childhood vaccines, and has found no connection to autism, as well as, concluded that all eight are safe except for a few rare cases. Autism is from a genetic mutation in certain genes that effect the function of the brain. Also, while there is some evidence that environmental factors, combined with a pre-genetic disposition, is the cause of autism, these factors are related to before and during birth and not the time afterward. Vaccines have no ability to alter genes because the pathogen they carry is dead or weaken and thus cannot interrupt normal cell production and just effects the target system, the immune system. Phil Plait (2014), PhD, and astronomer and author of Slate’s “Bad Astronomy”, when asked about mandatory vaccines

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