Vaccinating
in sentence
26 examples of Vaccinating in a sentence
Well, turns out that anything that reduces the need for the antibiotic would really work, so that could include improving hospital infection control or
vaccinating
people, particularly against the seasonal influenza.
People began to stop getting vaccinated, and stopped
vaccinating
their children.
And if we could do that, we could stop
vaccinating
everybody, worldwide, in all of our countries for polio.
African heads of state have personally launched polio campaigns synchronized across several countries,
vaccinating
tens of millions of children over a few days.
A study published by WHO and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in June predicts that
vaccinating
58 million girls in 179 countries would prevent 690,000 cases of cervical cancer and 420,000 deaths from the disease.
My optimism is based partly on the history of the United States, founded by leaders who were highly concerned about corruption; by some accounts, they devised the Constitution with the specific goal of
vaccinating
the new republic against vice.
After just one year, Rwanda reported
vaccinating
more than 93% of its adolescent girls against the human papillomavirus (HPV) – by far the largest cause of cervical cancer.
HPV vaccines can prevent 70% of these cases by targeting the two most common types of the virus, but only if girls have not yet been exposed to the virus, which means
vaccinating
them before they become sexually active.
Likewise, empathy with a handful of children who are, or are believed to be, harmed by vaccines largely drives popular resistance to
vaccinating
children against dangerous diseases.
Vaccinating
Against PovertyGENEVA – For most people, the choice between a life-threatening disease and a lifetime of crippling debt is no choice at all.
And, as Greek Minister of Health Andreas Xanthos has noted, health-care professionals are increasingly encountering parents who have fears about
vaccinating
their children.
Similarly, in Italy, Minister of Health Beatrice Lorenzin recently warned of a “fake news” campaign, backed by the opposition Five Star Movement, to dissuade parents from
vaccinating
their children.
No country can achieve herd immunity – and eventually eradicate preventable infectious diseases – if it allows parents to opt out of
vaccinating
their children, as in Greece.
Vaccinating
Against SuperbugsGENEVA – Whether you live below the poverty line in the slums of Karachi or work as a banker on Wall Street, drug-resistant “superbugs” are among the gravest threats to your health.
For example, support from the United Arab Emirates has been indispensable to
vaccinating
children in Pakistan – along with Afghanistan, the only two countries that have never been polio-free.
In effect, we are
vaccinating
germs against the drugs we want to use against them.
Vaccinating
Against an HIV ReboundBRIGHTON – When I began my career as an HIV activist in Botswana two decades ago, the thought of a vaccine seemed fanciful.
Vaccinating
girls against the human papillomavirus (HPV), and screening women on a routine basis, can drastically reduce deaths from cervical cancer.
Vaccinating
children against rotavirus, for example, can protect them from a pathogen that is responsible for 37% of all diarrhea deaths in children under five, thus saving 450,000 lives every year.
Childhood vaccinations are one of the greatest medical success stories of the twentieth century, not least because of so-called herd immunity (the indirect protection of entire communities, including those who cannot be immunized for reasons like illness or age, by
vaccinating
most of their members).
Patents vs. the PandemicNEW YORK – Imagine a world in which a global network of medical professionals monitored for emerging strains of a contagious virus, periodically updated an established formula for
vaccinating
against it, and then made that information available to companies and countries around the world.
Vaccinating
girls against the human papilloma virus (HPV) would avert more than three million deaths from cervical cancer over the next decade in 72 low- and middle-income countries.
It is easy to imagine what will happen once a vaccine is available: Latin America will lag in the challenge of
vaccinating
the population at an adequate pace.
There is a big difference between having effective vaccines and actually
vaccinating
a sufficient share of the global population.
The impact of vaccines depends on herd immunity: the protection of communities, including people who cannot be immunized for reasons like illness or age, by
vaccinating
most of their members.
Anti-vaxxers’ irresponsible misinformation ignores those with the most to lose by not vaccinating: the poorest and most vulnerable, who risk dying or sliding into medical impoverishment if they or their loved ones get sick.
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