immunised造句1. Now 95 per cent of UK babies are immunised against diphtheria, tetanus, polio, measles, mumps and rubella before they are a year old.
2. She wasn't immunised That's a legal requirement!
3. Voice over Children have been routinely immunised against polio since 1958 when the vaccine was introduced.
4. Rabbits were immunised with the methods of Freund's adjuvant and lymphocyte adsorption.
5. And it's getting rarer now that children are immunised against one of the commonest strains of meningitis.
6. It is very important that babies get immunised against whooping cough.
6.try its best to collect and build good sentences.
7. Few pregnant women choose to be immunised against winter flu.
8. Children in Hong Kong are immunised against tuberculosis, diphtheria, pertussis, poliomyelitis, tetanus, hepatitis B, measles, mumps and rubella.
9. Everyone who is going abroad will need to be immunised against typhoid.
10. The world may change, but somehow this vocabulary of complaints against declining standards and morals is immunised against change.
11. The World Health Organisation recommends that 95 % of children be immunised against measles to guarantee protection of the entire population.
12. Meningitis is relatively rare but extremely serious and universities advise students to be immunised against meningitis C, following outbreaks on a number of UK campuses in recent years.
13. But The Lancet states that Europe should follow the lead of the US state of Michigan, which passed a bill on September 21 ruling that all 11 to 12-year-old sixth grade girls must be immunised.
14. "For effective and long-term eradication of HPV, all adolescents must be immunised, " said The Lancet.
15. Queensland Health requires all health care worker students be immunised against Hepatitis B prior to their first clinical placement.
16. In 2000 the WHO recommended that school-age children should be immunised where typhoid is a substantial public health problem.
17. Swine flu's threat is so great that the NHS must avoid only small numbers of personnel getting immunised, as usually happens with seasonal flu every winter, the letters add.
18. The government's chief commissar for immunisations, Professor David Salisbury, has said that nurses have a "duty" to be immunised against swine flu.