What is the leading cause of infant hospitalization?
What is RSV
How does a vaccine work in your body?
Vaccines contain weakened or inactive parts of a pathogen (called antigens). This exposure mimics an infection, prompting your immune system to respond. When the vaccine is administered, your body recognizes the antigens as foreign invaders. This triggers an immune response, leading to the production of antibodies. After the initial response, your immune system creates memory cells that "remember" the specific antigens
What's an easy way to get time with you customer?
Bring them food!
Clean water and what are attributed to saving the most lives?
What is Sanofi's best selling vaccine?
Fluzone
what is the first vaccine a baby receives?
Hep B
What are some of the advantages of recombinant DNA technology?
exact strain match. no antigenic drift
Name 3 things your HCPs care about?
Safety, efficacy, price, reimbursement, convenience, reliability, etc.
What governing body guides the CDC immunization schedule?
ACIP
When did the foundation of Sanofi start?
1718
what is the number one cause of hospitalization in adults?
pneumonia
What is a monoclonal antibody?
monoclonal antibodies bind to specific antigens on pathogens (like viruses or bacteria) or on cancer cells. This binding can help mark these cells for destruction by the immune system or block their ability to function
What are two challenges offices see when looking to switch from pentacel/pediarix to vaxelis
Extra hep b dose and admin fees
The VFC was set up in 1993 in response to what disease epidemic?
Measles
What was Sanofi's first vaccine?
Polio
how much more likely are you to have heart attack after getting the flu if you are over 40?
10x
What is herd immunity?
When enough people are vaccinated, the disease has fewer opportunities to spread, protecting those who cannot be vaccinated
What is the biggest customer challenge facing vaccines today?
What is vaccine hesitancy
Name the 9 disease that are most commonly required to be vaccinated for in order to attend public school?
Dtap, MMR, varicella, Meningitis, polio
How many countries does Sanofi work in?
Over 100
Meningitis causes inflation in the protective membranes of what two parts of the body?
What is the brain and spinal cord
How does an mRNA vaccine work?
mRNA vaccines contain messenger RNA that instructs cells to produce a specific protein from the pathogen This protein is harmless on its own but triggers an immune response. The immune system recognizes this protein as foreign, leading to the production of antibodies and memory cells that prepare the body to fight the actual virus if encountered late
Who knows the most about an office and their immunization process?
Any form of nurse
How many Americans die every year from vaccine preventable illness?
what is roughly 30,000
How many vaccines does Sanofi supply everyday?
1.3 million