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Chairman's concluding remarks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Bridget M. Ogilvie
Affiliation:
The Wellcome Trust, I Park Square West, London NW1 4LJ

Summary

This meeting included talks which covered both the principles and problems of vaccine development and others that extensively reviewed the present state of progress towards the goal of antigenically defined parasite vaccines for human and veterinary use. Several speakers, particularly Drs Morrison and Gutteridge, pointed out that in comparison with bacteria and viruses there are few vaccines available against parasites and these consist of attenuated organisms for veterinary infections. Therefore, despite the intensity of effort, better defined vaccines for parasites still elude us.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1989

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References

REFERENCES

Ogilvie, B. M. (1988). Vaccines: around which corner? Immunology Letters 19, 245–50.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Williams, J. F. (1986). Prospects for prophylaxis of parasitism. In Parasitology – Quo Vadit? (ed. Howell, M. J.), pp. 711719. Canberra: Australian Academy of Science.Google Scholar
De Wilde, M. (1987). Vaccine development within industry. Acta Tropica 44, Suppl.12, 104–7.Google Scholar