Be Vaccinated!

      The ongoing pandemic disrupts routine immunization services in many countries. When immunization services are disrupted, even for brief periods during emergencies, the risk of

vaccine-preventable disease outbreaks, such as measles and polio, increase. Further disease outbreaks will also overwhelm health systems already battling the impacts of COVID-19.

     The pandemic has impacted almost every corner of life, causing global economies to stall, changing the way we work and interact with our loved ones, and stretching healthcare systems to the limit. Governments around the world have been forced to implement harsh restrictions on human activity to curb the spread of the

virus.Vaccination is a simple, safe, and effective way of protecting people against harmful diseases. Vaccines reduce risks of getting diseases by working with our body’s natural defenses to build protection. When we get a vaccine, our immune system responds it recognizes the invading germ, such as the virus or bacteria, produces antibodies, proteins produced naturally by the immune system to fight disease, remembers the disease and how to fight it. If you are then exposed to the germ in the future, your immune system can quickly destroy it before you become unwell. Being vaccinated does not mean that
we can throw caution to the wind and put ourselves and others at risk, particularly because research is still ongoing into how much vaccines protect not only against disease but also against infection and transmission.All COVID-19 vaccines that are in development are being carefully evaluated in clinical trials and will be authorized or approved only if they make it substantially less likely you will get COVID-19. 

     We understand that some people may be concerned about getting vaccinated now that COVID-19 vaccines are available in the United States.

After vaccination, the person develops immunity to the disease the side effects may be worse after the second dose of the vaccine because the body’s immune response will be intensified.



https://internationalbanker.com/finance/what-a-covid-19-vaccine-means-for-the-global-economic-recovery/

https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/coronavirus/covid-19-vaccines-myth-versus-fact?amp=true

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-02684-9

https://blogs.worldbank.org/climatechange/covid-19-vaccines-saving-lives-and-rebuilding-better

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