Preparations that train the immune system to recognise a specific pathogen, classified by what form of the pathogen or its components they contain.
The live versus killed distinction, BCG and oral polio as live vaccines, toxoids for tetanus, and the new mRNA and viral-vector platforms used against COVID-19 are current and recurring public-health facts.
Live attenuated vaccines use a weakened living pathogen, not a dead one; killed vaccines use a dead pathogen and usually need boosters. An mRNA vaccine does not contain the virus itself, only instructions for cells to make a single harmless viral protein.
Vaccine types include live attenuated (BCG, oral polio), inactivated (injectable polio), subunit and toxoid (tetanus, hepatitis B), and newer mRNA and viral-vector vaccines.
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