Smallpox Vaccinations For Children

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“Childhood vaccines are one of the great triumphs of science of modern medicine. Indeed parents whose children are vaccinated no longer have to worry about their child’s death or disability from whooping cough, polio, diphtheria, hepatitis, or a host of other infections” (Ezekiel Emanuel). During the 1700’s diseases infiltrated in the United States causing fatal epidemics everywhere it settled in. These diseases such as Smallpox killed millions of people throughout the whole world. Even though there was no cure for smallpox there was a smallpox vaccine that led to its eradication. Upon the invention of the Smallpox vaccine made by a British doctor named Edward Jenner, many people including worried parents started vaccinating their children …show more content…
Vaccinations are effective for children because it protects children’s immunity against diseases, saves children’s lives and protects children from vaccine-preventable outbreaks.

Vaccinations are effective for children because it protects children’s immunity against diseases. According to the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, vaccinations provide protection for children from diseases through acquired immunity. The National Foundation for Infectious Diseases indicated that “The CDC recommends vaccinations from births through adulthood to provide a lifetime of protection against many diseases and infections” (NFID 2). Vaccinations offer a type of protection so beneficial for children. This type of protection is given through acquired immunity which is necessary to combat against sudden diseases. The more vaccinations children receive the stronger their immunity against diseases becomes. As a vaccination is injected the body’s immune system releases antibodies to fight against the weakened viruses. After the inoculation if the disease or infection of the weakened virus visits the same body again, the body’s defense system will be ready to attack. Vaccines protect children from being greatly affected by diseases and infections that their immune systems alone can’t fight against. In the article, Vaccine Benefits by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
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Vaccines are not completely one hundred percent effective in fully protecting children from diseases. There are still children who get vaccinated that don’t fully become immune to diseases putting them at risk for contracting the diseases they were vaccinated for. With ineffective vaccines, children will still be at risk to contract diseases and even if they are successful in providing immunity towards a disease the diseases themselves can still affect children whenever they are exposed to it. However, what this belief fails to consider are the differences between vaccinated and unvaccinated children. Vaccinated children may contract the disease but will have just a mild case of it because their body has already produced antigens to combat that certain disease. On the other hand unvaccinated children are even more at risk towards contracting disease because they do not have the necessary antigens that can be provided through a vaccine to fight against the invading disease. Therefore vaccines still provide immune protection towards diseases even though it might not protect up to full measures. Diseases can affect vaccinated and unvaccinated children. What is essential is how children’s bodies are going to react and fight against these diseases.

Vaccines are effective for children. Vaccines provide the necessary immunity for children to