While current flu shots need to be updated each season, scientists are finding new ways to make vaccine that could last much longer and cover more strains.
Vaccine scepticism may seem like a new, growing movement. It’s probably a lot older than you think.
BBC Special Correspondent Katty Kay and physician Leana Wen discuss the current state of American medicine, from vaccine scepticism to RFK Jr's Make America Healthy Again initiative.
This 19th-Century killer is making a comeback – and with protection from the whooping cough vaccine waning over time, the hunt is on for something longer-lasting.
West Nile virus is spreading across the US and Europe. This deadly disease has been around for decades, but there is still no vaccine and no cure in humans.
Scientists are turning to a controversial approach to test new vaccines and treatments by deliberately infecting volunteers with potentially deadly viruses, parasites and bacteria.
There is concern about a new strain of the disease that has been spreading in parts of Africa.
The virus that causes mpox was first discovered at the end of the 1950s, but it has undergone changes in the past four years that allow it to pass between humans more easily.
The process of making vaccines for parasites is extremely challenging – but scientists might be on the cusp of major breakthroughs.