The Regional Preventive Service Working Group recommends that the Immunization Information System (IIS) increase the vaccination rate. IIS provides effective interventions such as customer reminders and recall systems, provider evaluation and feedback, provider alerts, determining customer vaccination status for clinicians, health authorities, school decisions, creating or supporting guidance It is effective. Public health addresses vaccine preventable diseases, informs assessment of the scope of vaccination, misses vaccination opportunities, signals ineffective dosage control and different range of vaccination, and Promote vaccine management and accountability. IIS is a population-based confidential computer database that records all immunization doses of participating medical institutions for people living in specific geopolitical regions.
Vaccination is the administration of antigenic substances (vaccines) to stimulate the immune system of an individual to develop adaptive immunity against pathogens. Vaccines can prevent or ameliorate infections. Population immunity occurs when a sufficiently large population is vaccinated. The effectiveness of vaccination has been extensively studied and verified. Immunization is the most effective way to prevent infection; the extensive immunization induced by vaccination is the global eradication of smallpox and polio, measles and tetanus in the majority of the world It is the main cause of exclusion.
It is clear that the relationship between vaccination and 50 million people with autoimmune diseases must be hidden. It is well known that the management of an intensive immune system by immunization programs leads to autoimmune diseases (a study on the role of aluminum injection), the vaccination rate will plummet with the confidence of the government and health authorities. Knowledge and possibilities of autoimmune epidemic disease Therefore, we must continue cheating
This vaccine is designed to induce an immune response to protect vaccinated individuals while they are exposed to this disease in the future. However, the immune system of an individual is different, and in some cases, the human immune system may not generate sufficient response. As a result, he or she will not be effectively protected after vaccination. In other words, most vaccines are very effective. After vaccination with the second MMR vaccine (measles, mumps and rubella) or another measles vaccine, 99.7% of vaccinated individuals received vaccination against measles. Inactivated polio vaccine showed 99% efficacy after 3 doses. Varicella (varicella) vaccine is effective in preventing 85 to 90% of varicella infection, but it has 100% effect in prevention of moderate to severe varicella.