- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#26503
Complete Question Explanation
Question #15: Justify. The correct answer choice is (D).
To avoid serious cases of influenza, the author suggests that we annually immunize all high-risk individuals. However, each year’s vaccination will protect only against the strain of virus deemed most likely to be prevalent that year. On that basis, the author concludes that high-risk individuals will need to be immunized for a different strain every year.
The conclusion contains a logical gap, and a suitable prephrase is in order: what if the most prevalent strain never changes? If so, then there'd be no reason to receive a different vaccine every year. To prove the conclusion, we must establish that each year's most prevalent strain is different from the strain deemed most prevalent the year before. This prephrase agrees with answer choice (D).
Note, that despite the word "assumption" in the question stem, this is a Justify question, because the correct answer choice must allow the conclusion to be properly drawn. In other words, it must be sufficient to prove the conclusion.
Answer choice (A) is incorrect, because this would only affect the number of administered vaccines each year, not whether people need to be immunized for different strains every year.
Answer choice (B) is incorrect, because the likelihood of an epidemic has no bearing on the question of whether the vaccines need to be changed each year.
Answer choice (C) is attractive, but incorrect. If no vaccine protects against more than one strain, does that prove that we need to change the strains each year? Not unless we also assume that the most prevalent strain changes! If the most prevalent strain remains the same, we can keep using the same vaccine year after year, even if that vaccine protects against only one strain.
Answer choice (D) is the correct answer choice, as it agrees with our prephrase above.
Answer choice (E) is incorrect, because the question of side effects is extraneous to the argument.
Question #15: Justify. The correct answer choice is (D).
To avoid serious cases of influenza, the author suggests that we annually immunize all high-risk individuals. However, each year’s vaccination will protect only against the strain of virus deemed most likely to be prevalent that year. On that basis, the author concludes that high-risk individuals will need to be immunized for a different strain every year.
The conclusion contains a logical gap, and a suitable prephrase is in order: what if the most prevalent strain never changes? If so, then there'd be no reason to receive a different vaccine every year. To prove the conclusion, we must establish that each year's most prevalent strain is different from the strain deemed most prevalent the year before. This prephrase agrees with answer choice (D).
Note, that despite the word "assumption" in the question stem, this is a Justify question, because the correct answer choice must allow the conclusion to be properly drawn. In other words, it must be sufficient to prove the conclusion.
Answer choice (A) is incorrect, because this would only affect the number of administered vaccines each year, not whether people need to be immunized for different strains every year.
Answer choice (B) is incorrect, because the likelihood of an epidemic has no bearing on the question of whether the vaccines need to be changed each year.
Answer choice (C) is attractive, but incorrect. If no vaccine protects against more than one strain, does that prove that we need to change the strains each year? Not unless we also assume that the most prevalent strain changes! If the most prevalent strain remains the same, we can keep using the same vaccine year after year, even if that vaccine protects against only one strain.
Answer choice (D) is the correct answer choice, as it agrees with our prephrase above.
Answer choice (E) is incorrect, because the question of side effects is extraneous to the argument.