Health Check

Vaccines: A tale of the unexpected

Informações:

Sinopsis

In this week’s Health Check we’re talking about the protective effects of vaccines – but it’s not quite what you think… We’re delving into the science of how some vaccines could have unexpected effects beyond their intended target. They’re called “non-specific effects” and we’re only just at the beginning of our understanding despite scientists documenting this curious biological phenomenon more than 100 years ago. One of the earliest vaccines to be studied was the Bacillus Calmette-Guérin vaccine for Tuberculosis, better known as the BCG. Professor Christine Stabell-Benn gives us a history lesson and brings us up to date with her team’s research at the Bandim Health Project in Guinea-Bissau, Western Africa. Also in the programme we hear about a new device for fixing bones being trialled in Gaza and Sri Lanka – and already in use in Ukraine. We hear from surgeons about what kind of patients they are treating and from UK researchers on hopes it will offer a low-cost, easy-to-make alternative in countries