Vaccines
in sentence
693 examples of Vaccines in a sentence
They can also make antiviral drugs and
vaccines
less effective, because they’re tailored very specifically to a virus.
The slower mutation rate of coronaviruses means our immune systems, drugs, and
vaccines
might be able to recognize them for longer after infection, and therefore protect us better.
Within the next several years, one or possibly several
vaccines
become widely, and hopefully freely, available thanks to a worldwide effort.
Even if the pandemic officially ends before a vaccine is ready, the virus may reappear seasonally, so
vaccines
will continue to protect people.
And that might seem a bit surprising, because my full-time work at the foundation is mostly about
vaccines
and seeds, about the things that we need to invent and deliver to help the poorest two billion live better lives.
Now, if we do a really great job on new vaccines, health care, reproductive health services, we could lower that by, perhaps, 10 or 15 percent.
About a decade ago, I wrote a story about
vaccines
for The New Yorker.
Well, it's good, except that Paul goes around talking about
vaccines
and says how valuable they are and that people ought to just stop the whining.
I don't need to say this, but
vaccines
are essential.
But in the developing world a lot of
vaccines
spoil before they're administered, and that's because they need to be kept cold.
Almost all
vaccines
need to be kept at refrigerator temperatures.
This is one of the ways that
vaccines
are carried: These are Styrofoam chests.
So a simple idea, which we hope is going to change the way
vaccines
are distributed in Africa and around the world.
In the vaccine area, Synthetic Genomics and the Institute are forming a new vaccine company because we think these tools can affect
vaccines
to diseases that haven't been possible to date, things where the viruses rapidly evolve, such with rhinovirus.
Or, more importantly, HIV, where the virus evolves so quickly the
vaccines
that are made today can't keep up with those evolutionary changes.
We're already preventing millions of deaths with existing vaccines, and if we get these to more people, we can certainly save more lives.
But with new or better
vaccines
for malaria, TB, HIV, pneumonia, diarrhea, flu, we could end suffering that has been on the Earth since the beginning of time.
So, I'm here to trumpet
vaccines
for you.
But first, I have to explain why they're important because vaccines, the power of them, is really like a whisper.
We don't see scenes like this anymore because of
vaccines.
Now, it's interesting because there are 30-odd diseases that can be treated with
vaccines
now, but we're still threatened by things like HIV and flu.
So let's explore how
vaccines
work.
So that's really how
vaccines
work.
The antibodies you just saw in this video, in action, are the ones that make most
vaccines
work.
Large companies moved away from it because they thought the science was so difficult and
vaccines
were seen as poor business.
Well, we first figured out how to make flu vaccines, how to produce them, in the early 1940s.
So today, we get our flu
vaccines
from ... chicken eggs, (Laughter) hundreds of millions of chicken eggs.
You could see an avian strain that would infect the poultry flocks, and then we would have no eggs for our
vaccines.
India, Mexico and others are already making experimental flu vaccines, and they may be the first place we see these
vaccines
in use.
Because these technologies are so efficient and relatively cheap, billions of people can have access to lifesaving
vaccines
if we can figure out how to deliver them.
Back
Next
Related words
Countries
Health
Which
Access
Children
Development
Other
Diseases
People
Against
There
Effective
Their
Global
About
Drugs
Could
World
Would
Develop