Why a vaccine can provide better immunity than an actual infection

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ANALYSIS: Why a vaccine can provide better immunity than an actual infection

This triggers strongly neutralising antibodies, making the vaccine very effective at preventing infection.

Indeed, a vaccine that provides accessible antigens in the absence of these other proteins may allow us to control the response in a way that a natural infection does not. Alongside this, the dose and route of administration can be controlled to encourage appropriate immune responses in the right places. Traditionally, vaccines are administered by injection into the muscle, even for respiratory viruses such as measles.

 

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Correct, a 'good' vaccine won't make you lose the ability to use your arms or legs. Then there's also other 'unknown' effects:

No. Often vaccines interfere with body's natural defences & sometimes create long-term issues of the body's immune system. Cancer rates have increased, autism rates have increased, alzheimer's & dementia rates increased, fibromyalgias, chronic fatigue, ms & rarely deaths.

More evidence an effective vaccine is years away

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