- Fri Sep 30, 2016 5:15 pm
#29218
Hi,
I don't understand why option A counters the doctors' claim. Regardless of when most people now contract Hep E, if the doctors successfully produced a vaccine they could immunize children now, and therefore future young adults would be immune at the time they would otherwise have contracted the disease, making the claim true.
Is the idea that Hep E is unusual in that vaccines just don't work for it, because if they did, those children who were exposed in childhood would already be immune? I see that the other answers also don't weaken the claim, but still can't determine why A does.
Thanks!
Rita
I don't understand why option A counters the doctors' claim. Regardless of when most people now contract Hep E, if the doctors successfully produced a vaccine they could immunize children now, and therefore future young adults would be immune at the time they would otherwise have contracted the disease, making the claim true.
Is the idea that Hep E is unusual in that vaccines just don't work for it, because if they did, those children who were exposed in childhood would already be immune? I see that the other answers also don't weaken the claim, but still can't determine why A does.
Thanks!
Rita