You are on page 1of 1

NAME: MARIA VENUS I.

MONTOLO DATE: JUNE 4, 2021


YEAR & SECTION : BEED 1C

From vaccines invented by experts, how would you consider these empower against the fear of the
people during this war against the pandemic?

We have different ways on how we would empower the people. And in my own perspective, first, I
would empower the people by telling them that they shouldn't let their fears consumed themselves
because if they did consumed their fears by their own selves, expect that the pandemic is not the one to
be blame enough if they died. Instead, they should blame their fears that let their selves take their own
lives. Second, I would use the vaccines invented by the experts so that their fear would probably gone. I
would definitely used it as a weapon to kill their fears for this weapon is the not the cure to end their
fears but the key to lessen their fears or to let their fears go away. Lastly, I would sum up the first and
the second ones and then use my voice to empower the people that they shouldn't let their fears
consumed themselves and to raise awareness that they should use the vaccines as weapon to slip their
fears away from their lives.

As the world waits for a vaccine to defeat the COVID-19 pandemic, we look back to all that vaccines
have achieved for humanity.
The World Health Organization (WHO), working in partnership with both public and private sectors, has
a proud history of vaccinology.

By assessing vaccines for global supply, WHO’s groundbreaking Prequalification programme has made
possible the deployment of quality-assured, safe and effective vaccines to dozens of countries across the
world. This programme gives countries the security and confidence to know that vaccines being
purchased meet WHO standards for safety, effectiveness and quality.

Humanly speaking it will be gradually reduce the fear and anxiety of every individual when expert
successfully developed a vaccine for covid-19 virus. For almost 2 years of struggling in this crisis and so
that everyone of us were eager to have a vaccine for this virus in order to have the possibility of going
back to normal lives, where we don’t have to wear face mask when we go outside and people have their
freedom to go outside without hesitation, they are more confident to go outside because they are able
to have vaccinated. However having the vaccine developed it will eliminate the number of cases of the
people whom infected by the virus and for those people critically in line there is chances that they might
survive.

As a citizen of the Philippines I’m so glad that expert successfully invented the vaccine because by this
vaccine it can change the perception of the people that we might have the courage to fight in this time
of pandemic. There’s still hope in the darkest time. We don’t have to be afraid. We don’t have to be fear
perhaps like a vaccine we have to be fearless and brave enough to face the covid.

Today, 86% of the world’s children receive essential, lifesaving vaccines, increasing from around 20%
back in 1980. This protects them and their communities against a range of infectious diseases, including
measles, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough), hepatitis B and polio. The number of children
paralysed by polio has been reduced by 99.9 percent worldwide over the last three decades.

This level of protection comes through a strong global effort to increase vaccine access and affordability,
with support in recent decades from new partnerships like Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance focussing on
expanding vaccine availability in the poorest countries and the Measles & Rubella Initiative.

The availability of a safe and effective vaccine for COVID-19 is well-recognized as an additional tool to
contribute to the control of the pandemic. At the same time, the challenges and efforts needed to
rapidly develop, evaluate and produce this at scale are enormous. It is vital that we evaluate as many
vaccines as possible as we cannot predict how many will turn out to be viable.

To increase the chances of success (given the high level of attrition during vaccine development), we
must test all candidate vaccines until they fail. WHO is working to ensure that all of them have the
chance of being tested at the initial stage of development.

This is a major and extraordinary global research undertaking: WHO is facilitating collaboration and
accelerated efforts on a scale not seen before; it is convening vital communications across the research
community and beyond.

You might also like