What is the difference between a vaccination and immunization?!


Question: What is the difference between a vaccination and immunization!?
Answers:
Vaccinate originates from Jenner's smallpox vaccine:
The root of the word Vaccine or Vaccinate is Vacca meaning Cow!. Jenner theorized that milk maids had fair "unpocked" skin because they often would get a mild infection with CowPox (caused by the Vaccinia virus) and that might have made them immune to the more disfiguring and lethal Smallpox infection (caused by the Variola virus)!. So originally, vaccinate was specifically inoculating with cowpox to prevent smallpox!. We use the term today more generally to refer to any introduction of antigen when the purpose is to protect the recipient from infection by a disease-causing agent!.

Immunize is generic and not necessarily linked to desease prevention:
We use the word Immunize whenever we describe introduction of antigens into a living being where we expect the antigen to produce some kind of a response that meets the criteria of an immune response!. To immunize the antigen may be injected (subcutaneously, intradermally, intramuscularly, or in some body cavity); it may be painted on the skin, or it may be given "Mucosally " (ie in the eyes, nose, mouth, respiratory tract, gastrointestinal and urogenical tracts)!. All of these are "routes" of immunization!.Www@Answer-Health@Com





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