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Megan Griffiths is a PhD student at the University of Glasgow in Scotland. She researches an innovative tool for public health: self-spreading vaccines in wildlife. Today, she explains the history of vaccinating wildlife and how self-spreading vaccines work. To learn more about Megan's work, visit: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Megan-Griffiths-13. Timeline: 00:00 Introduction 02:38 Why We Vaccinate Animals 04:50 Risks from Wild Animals 05:52 Historical Case Studies 08:19 Edible Vaccines 10:59 Self-Spreading Vaccines 14:18 Harmless Viruses 16:03 Pros/Cons of Self-Spreading Vaccines P.S. Some fancy words Megan used: - Clinical trials: carefully regulated tests to show taht a medicine is or isn't effective. - System: a group of organisms that interact - Antigen: a part of a virus that our immune system can recognise as dangerous. Like a 'red flag' marking danger. - Mutate: an organism changing its DNA, allowing it to have different capabilities. - Metabolism: the process of converting food to energy
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