Vaccination Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Vaccination stocks.

Vaccination Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 31 EBS Emergent Bio gains as RSDL sale nets $75M
Jul 31 PCVX Wall Street Analysts See a 25.16% Upside in Vaxcyte (PCVX): Can the Stock Really Move This High?
Jul 31 EBS Emergent BioSolutions Completes Sale of RSDL® (Reactive Skin Decontamination Lotion) Kit to SERB Pharmaceuticals for $75 Million
Jul 30 NVAX Novavax stock plunges after JPMorgan downgrade
Jul 30 NVAX Novavax Sinks 26%. Vaccine Demand Triggers Downgrade.
Jul 30 NVAX Novavax drops as J.P. Morgan cuts to Underweight after recent rally
Jul 30 NVAX Why F5 Shares Are Trading Higher By Over 14%; Here Are 20 Stocks Moving Premarket
Jul 29 CVM CEL-SCI Announces Closing of $10.8 Million Offering
Jul 29 PCVX Are You Looking for a Top Momentum Pick? Why Vaxcyte, Inc. (PCVX) is a Great Choice
Jul 26 NVAX Novavax Ahead Of Q2 Earnings - Picking Apart The Sanofi Deal
Jul 26 CVM CEL-SCI Announces Pricing of $10.8 Million Offering
Jul 26 CVM CEL-SCI stock rallies 40% on Multikine study analysis results
Jul 26 VALN Can Valneva (VALN) Climb 149.04% to Reach the Level Wall Street Analysts Expect?
Jul 26 CVM CEL-SCI’s Phase 3 Population Analysis for Upcoming Confirmatory Registration Study in Head & Neck Cancer Demonstrates Well Balanced Patient Population, Confidence in Clinical Results
Jul 25 INO Inovio Receives Advanced Therapy Medicinal Product Certificate from European Medicines Agency for Quality and Non-Clinical Data for Lead Candidate INO-3107
Jul 25 EBS The stock market’s cruel summer is about to get much worse
Jul 25 INO INOVIO to Report Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results on August 8, 2024
Vaccination

Vaccination is the administration of antigenic material (a vaccine) to stimulate an individual's immune system to develop adaptive immunity to a pathogen. Vaccines can prevent or ameliorate infectious disease. When a sufficiently large percentage of a population has been vaccinated, herd immunity results. The effectiveness of vaccination has been widely studied and verified. Vaccination is the most effective method of preventing infectious diseases; widespread immunity due to vaccination is largely responsible for the worldwide eradication of smallpox and the elimination of diseases such as polio, measles, and tetanus from much of the world.
Smallpox was most likely the first disease people tried to prevent by inoculation and was the first disease for which a vaccine was produced. The smallpox vaccine was invented in 1796 by English physician Edward Jenner and although at least six people had used the same principles years earlier he was the first to publish evidence that it was effective and to provide advice on its production. Louis Pasteur furthered the concept through his work in microbiology. The immunization was called vaccination because it was derived from a virus affecting cows (Latin: vacca 'cow'). Smallpox was a contagious and deadly disease, causing the deaths of 20–60% of infected adults and over 80% of infected children. When smallpox was finally eradicated in 1979, it had already killed an estimated 300–500 million people in the 20th century.
In common speech, vaccination and immunization have a similar meaning. This distinguishes it from inoculation, which uses unweakened live pathogens, although in common usage either can refer to an immunization. Vaccination efforts have been met with some controversy on scientific, ethical, political, medical safety, and religious grounds. In rare cases, vaccinations can injure people. In the United States, people may receive compensation for those injuries under the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. Early success brought widespread acceptance, and mass vaccination campaigns have greatly reduced the incidence of many diseases in numerous geographic regions.

Browse All Tags