This fact sheet explains PATH's efforts on maternal immunity, a method of vaccinating during pregnancy to protect mothers and babies. It covers research on respiratory syncytial virus, group B streptococci, influenza and pertussis infection.
As they receive antibodies from their mothers, newborns can be protected from certain infections. However, their immunity begins to settle in the first few months of life, making babies more susceptible to infections. That is why it is important to vaccinate your child based on the vaccination program recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Syphilis is an infectious disease caused by bacteria called Treponema pallidum and spread widely in Europe in the period after the Constitution was enacted. It spreads through sexual contact and is handed down from mother to baby. Fortunately, this disease is currently rare and is easily treated with antibiotics. Fractures are caused by stress on the bone, causing fractures and fractures. Fourteen people in the collection showed evidence of this trauma. And all of them cured to a certain extent. Most people are on skulls, but pre-historical individual vertebral fractures may be caused by falls. Most of the direct impact seen in the museum's London collection is on the nose and face.
You can resist certain diseases at birth because maternal antibodies (protein produced in the body to combat the disease) are passed through them through the placenta. After giving birth, infant of breast milk can obtain the advantage of persistent antibody than breast milk. In either case, however, protection is temporary. Microorganisms, it can also be a virus (such as measles virus) that can be bacteria (eg, pneumococcus). It can tolerate "infection" and remember the organism so that it can later fight it in the body quickly - the vaccine stimulates the immune system to respond as if there is a real infection
The best way to protect your baby from illness is breastfeeding. Breastfeeding babies are less likely to develop asthma, ear infections, multiple sclerosis, obesity, colic and reflux. As mothers transfer cells from their immune system via breast milk to protect their babies from the illness they are experiencing and immunize their babies from certain allergies, infants can also develop allergies and infections It will be low. Breast milk also contains the exact nutrients required by the baby; breast milk contains adequate amounts of fat, carbohydrates and proteins. When the baby needs to change, the inherent characteristics of milk change. The formula tries to duplicate the ingredients of breast milk, but there are at least 100 ingredients and unknown breast milk, but there is no formula. Babies are not allergic to breast milk, but sometimes they may be allergic to the following ingredients.