This is the combination of physical, mental/emotional, and social well-being.
Health
Naturally virus and corresponding disease was destroyed worldwide by 1980. In addition to flu-like symptoms, patients also experience a rash that appear first on the face, hands and forearms, and then later appears on the trunk.
Small Pox
This is a a substance used to stimulate the production of antibodies and provide immunity against one or several diseases, prepared from the causative agent of a disease, its products, or a synthetic substitute, treated to act as an antigen without inducing the disease.
Vaccines
This refers to all the traits that were biologically passed on to you from your parents.
Heredity
These are people of the same age who share similar interests, also include your friends.
Peers
This is an overall state of well-being or total health.
Wellness
This is a strategy to inhibit the spread of a disease by vaccinating those who are most likely to be infected. This strategy vaccinates the contacts of confirmed patients, and people who are in close contact with those contacts
Ring Vaccination
These vaccines use a different approach that takes advantage of the process that cells use to make proteins: cells use DNA as the template to make messenger RNA (mRNA) molecules, which are then translated to build proteins.
This refers to the collective beliefs, customs, and behaviors of a group.
Culture
These are actions that can potentially threaten your health or the health of others
Risk Behaviors
This is includes our emotional, psychological, and social well-being. It affects how we think, feel, and act.
Mental Health
The is a form of indirect protection from infectious disease that can occur with some diseases when a sufficient percentage of a population has become immune to an infection, whether through vaccination or previous infections, thereby reducing the likelihood of infection for individuals who lack immunity
Herd Immunity
This type of vaccine use the killed version of the germ that causes a disease and usually don’t provide immunity (protection) that’s as strong as live vaccines. So you may need several doses over time (booster shots) in order to get ongoing immunity against diseases.
Inactivated Vaccines
This is the sum of your surroundings, including the physical places in which you live and the people who make up your world.
Environment
These differences in health outcomes among groups are called....
Health Disparities
This is a deep seated sense of meaning and purpose in life.
Spiritual Health
This can be a harmless pill, medicine, or procedure prescribed more for the psychological benefit to the patient than for any physiological effect.
Placebo
This a weakened form of the germ that causes a disease. Because these vaccines are so similar to the natural infection that they help prevent, they create a strong and long-lasting immune response.
Live-attenuated Vaccines
These are the various methods for communicating information.
Media
These are related risk that increase in effect with each added risk.
Cumulative Risk
This is an ongoing condition or illness such as heart disease, obesity, and cancer.
Chronic Disease
This is the expected amount of people infected by one person
Reproduction Number
These type of vaccines use specific pieces of the germ—like its protein, sugar, or capsid (a casing around the germ).
Because these vaccines use only specific pieces of the germ, they give a very strong immune response that’s targeted to key parts of the germ.
Subunit Vaccines
The use of science in industry, engineering, etc., to invent useful things or to solve problems
Technology
This refers to a person's capacity to learn about and understand basic health information and services and to use these resources to promote one's health and wellness.
Health Literacy