Webinar on

Vaccines & Immunization

February 28, 2022

Vaccines 2022

Theme: Understanding the Importance of Vaccines in the Present Era

We are delighted to welcome participants from all over the world to be a part of the “Webinar on Vaccines & Immunization” scheduled for February 28, 2022.
A leading forum for microbiologists, researchers, scientists, elite professors, technologists, and students provides the ideal environment to spread and gain current knowledge in this field. The main theme of the webinar is “Understanding the Importance of Vaccines in the Present Era” Vaccines & Immunization Webinar brings upon an incipient platform to share and discuss all the innovations and potential benefits and limitations of vaccines in preventing and control of diseases. This Vaccines & Immunization 2022 Online Conference is confident that it will definitely offer all participants an unforgettable experience in exploring new opportunities.

Session1: Therapeutic Vaccination and Immunization

The vaccination helps the immune system recognize and fight specific germs. Perfect immunity against a disease is not guaranteed through vaccination. Immunization refers to making someone immune against infections or diseases. Immunization is not only caused by Vaccines but there are also some diseases that cause immunization after individual encounters and recovers from that disease.

Session2: Cancer Vaccine

Vaccines are stated to healthy people to help prevent infections, such as measles and chickenpox. These vaccines use weakened or killed germs like viruses or bacteria to start an immune response in the body. Most of the cancer vaccines work the same way, but they make the person’s immune system attack cancer cells. Cancer treatment vaccines are different from the vaccines that work as opposed to viruses. These vaccines try to get the immune system to attack cancer cells in the body. Some cancer therapy vaccines are made up of cancer cells and parts of cells, or pure antigens. Sometimes a patient’s own immune cells are detached and exposed to these substances in the lab to create the vaccine. Once the vaccine is ready, it is injected into the body to increase the immune response against the cancer cells. Cancer vaccines cause the immune system to attack cells with one or more specific antigens. The immune system contains special cells for memory, it’s hoped that the vaccine might continue to work long after it’s given.

Session3: HIV and AIDS Vaccine

Vaccine for AIDS does not yet exist, but efforts to develop a vaccine against HIV are going on. At present there are no restorative HIV immunizations affirmed by FDA, the virus that causes AIDS, have been underway for many years. CD4 cells are a type of lymphocyte, these play an important part in the immune system. HIV vaccine would play a powerful role in ensuring the end of the AIDS epidemic. The “therapeutic” vaccine would not stop the infection, but it may prevent or delay illness in people who do become infected and might also reduce the risk of transmitting the virus to other people. The idea behind all HIV vaccines is to encourage the human immune system to fight HIV and all discussed in Vaccine Meeting.

Session4: Pregnancy & Neonatal Vaccines

Vaccines are given specifically depending on factors such as age, lifestyle, medical conditions, such as asthma or diabetes, type and locations of travel, and previous vaccinations. Benefits of vaccinating pregnant women usually outweigh potential risks when the likelihood of disease exposure is high, when infection would pose a risk to the mother or fetus, and when the vaccine is unlikely to cause harm. There are unique CDC rules for the immunizations which are required after pregnancy.

Session5: Vaccine and Types

Vaccines contain an active component i.e., an antigen that produces the protective immune response. These vaccines are of two types live or inactivate. Live, attenuated vaccines consist of ‘wild’ viruses or a bacterium that has been weakened in the lab so it can’t cause disease. Because live, attenuated vaccines are natural infection, these vaccines are “teachers” of the immune system. Whereas inactivate vaccines are created by wild viruses or bacteria that have been grown in a culture medium and inactivated before being included in a vaccine. Inactivate toxins for bacterial diseases cause illness, or merely segments of the pathogen this includes both subunit and conjugate vaccines.

Session6: Veterinary Vaccine

The major aims of the Vaccine Conference on veterinary vaccines are to enhance the health and welfare of animals. Vaccination of creatures is utilized both to keep their contracting sicknesses and to counteract transmission of illness to humans. Both creatures that kept as pets and creatures raised as domesticated animals are routinely immunized to prevent infections transmitted from wild categories. In a few cases, wild populations might be inoculated. While it is the case of transmitted diseases and zoonotic diseases. These veterinary vaccines have an impact not only on animal health but also on human health by preventing animal-to-human transmission of infectious diseases. The constant relation between human and animal researchers will be of major importance in finding new technologies. There are several vaccines are available and research going on in the development of several veterinary vaccines i.e. rabies, canine distemper, canine parvovirus, irresistible canine hepatitis, adenovirus-2, leptospirosis, brocatelle, canine Para influenza infection, and Lyme ailment, and others.

  • Therapeutic Vaccination and Immunization
  • Cancer Vaccine
  • HIV and AIDS Vaccine
  • Pregnancy & Neonatal Vaccines
  • Vaccine and Types
  • Veterinary Vaccine