Yes, a large percentage of vaccines are for viral infections, there are not many vaccines for bacterial infections but there are a few.
The flu is caused by a virus, vaccinations against the flu work very well, for example.
Vaccines don't kill viruses or diseases; they prevent disease before you are infected.
vaccines
they inject a milder form of the disease , so your body won't be fully affected but will remember how to kill the real disease and its weakness Note, though, that computer viruses are not prevented using vaccines.
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No. Vaccines are not used for treatment. They are used as prevention.
This is how vaccines help the body's natural defenses against viruses: -because vaccines contain weak and dead viruses -this can help our immune system to recognize and adapt to it -so this will not be the problem for it if later on this type of viruses threat us Hope this help Vipha
What are vaccines for influenza made from?parts or products of a virusdead, whole virusesantibodies to the virusweakened viruses
Vaccines for the prevention of the specific viral infection can be made with inactive "dead" viruses. They are also made with live, but attenuated (weakened), viruses. See more below about vaccines.
Currently, all vaccines on the market today only exist for diseases caused by viruses- though not all diseases caused by viruses have a corresponding vaccine. Notably, the common cold (rhinoviruses) and AIDS (HIV) have no vaccines.
Because certain viruses and bacteria evolve to become resistant to the old vaccines.
Vaccines are small amounts of live viruses injected into the body. These viruses teach the body's immune system how to fight off the disease. Correction: Some viruses are live. Some are weakened, most flu vaccines are dead viruses, not live, although the nasal mist is a live, weakened virus. Please make sure your answers are correct.
antibodies