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Type II Diabetes
... answer the question: How does a person get the disease? I found that it may be caused by many different factors. There are conflicting ideas between sources. The most recent book I used was Diabetes by Carol Semple printed in 1996. On page seventeen, he states that Type II is hereditary. In my oldest source, Diabetes by Sarah Riedman printed in 1980, she stated on page five that Type II is not a hereditary disorder. I concluded that Type II is hereditary because all the newer sources support that fact. In my source from the Ames Center for Diabetes Center (written in 1995) Jackson and Weir stated that the gene, or genes, responsible for the most common kind ...
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Tuberculosis
... At this time TB is
active then it becomes TB disease. It can now affect the system's organs. A
person can have TB disease shortly after being infected with TB germs if the
person's immune system is weak.
TB can attack any part of the system. The lungs are the most common area of
attack. People with the TB disease have one or more of the following symptoms:
a cough that hangs on, fevers, weight loss, night sweats, constant fatigue, and
loss of appetite. A person with the TB disease in the late stages will cough up
blood streaked sputum. People who have Active TB disease usually only have mild
symptoms. There are three tests to diagnose TB disease. One is th ...
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Alternative Medicine
... of medical practice,
manual healing methods, pharamacologic and biologic treatments, herbal
medicine and diet and nutrition. The three most commonly practiced are
mind-body interventions, alternative systems of medical practice and herbal
medicine. I became interested in alternative medicine after show on a news
program like 20/20 or Dateline. I thought it would be interesting to find
our what other sources there are for help when I am ill.
Alternative medicine twenty years ago was an obscure term. Only 5
to 10 years ago, most physicians would have dismissed alternative medicine
as a fad that was perhaps a remnant of the 60's pop culture. An article in
Amer ...
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Tumours
... The cells of benign tumours
closely resemble the cells of the tissue of origin. Surface benign tumours
include warts and moles.
Malignant Tumours
A malignant tumour always kills (unless treated) because of its
invasive and metastatic characteristics. The tumour grows locally by
spreading into surrounding tissues. Solid tumours, which develop in the
breast, colon, lung, and other organs, contain an inner core with high
pressure zones that compress and collapse blood vessels, often preventing
the penetration of blood-borne cancer treatments. It spreads to distant
sites by the breaking off of malignant cells, which move through the blood
and ly ...
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Abortion: A Women's Right And Choice
... States about 1.6 million pregnancies end in abortion.
Women with incomes under eleven thousand are over three times more likely
to abort than those with incomes above twenty-five thousand. Unmarried
women are four to five times more likely to abort than married and the
abortion rate has doubled for 18 and 19 year olds. Recently the U.S. rate
dropped 6 percent overall but the rate of abortion among girls younger than
15 jumped 18 percent. The rate among minority teens climbed from 186 per
1,000 to 189 per 1,000.
The most popular procedure involved in abortions is the vacuum
aspiration which is done during the first trimester (three months or less
since the women ...
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Abortion
... liberty.
The unwanted child also suffers. Most of the time the mother of the
unwanted child is very young and inexperienced or too poor to take care of
the child. The child is usually malnourished, has no medical care, and
gets very little attention or love. The foster care system isn't any
better. Only a small percentage of the children are adopted by suitable
parents. But the rest remain in the foster care system, where there is
little or no personal care. In both cases, the child has a poor education
because of the lack of attention and discipline. He grows up to be
unproductive individual or a menace to society. Many get involved in drugs
and ...
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Suicide Solution
... be true
world leaders. The rest will just lead a mediocre life of work and little
play.
The taking of ones life can be argued from a populistic view as
well. It makes little sense to preserve life in an over populated world.
True, one less person here on there will not make a large dent. Yet if
everyone who attempts or had attempted suicide were not stopped, the
impact would be noticed.
Another popular argument for stoppers, people who want to prevent
suicide, is that nothing can be bad enough. Yet how do they know this?
They do not have to put up with the same stuff the suicide victim does
everyday. How could they possibly know what the potential ...
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The History And Facts About Nicotine And Tobacco
... clay pipes above their hearths for use of travelers. After smoking their tobacco they would break off a bit of the end and place it back above the hearth for the next person.
By 1620, planters started to grow their own supply of tobacco. They started growing up to 100,000 pounds of tobacco a year! At this rate, the figure of tobacco got to be as high as 100 million pounds by the time of the American Revolution.
In the 17th century, cultivating tobacco became the most important industry of the Virginia and Maryland colonies. Sometime later it became the major industry in North Carolina.
“The first of the tobacco manufacturers to mass-produce cigarettes was ...
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Drugs And Pregnancy: Drugs Affect On The Baby
... 18.8% reported using alcohol, and 20.4%reported using tobacco.
(3)
Parents who abuse alcohol and illicit drugs face risks of losing
custody of their children. Pregnant women who continue to use drugs
against medical advice face increased risks of losing their babies once
they are born. In some States, they also risk criminal prosecution. (3)
Children born to women who use drugs like alcohol, tobacco, or
cocaine may have long term health problems. (2)
Pregnancy and Smoking
Cigarette smoking is associated with severe adverse conditions in
newborns, including low birth weight. Infants whose parents smoke are
unusually ...
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Lucid Dreams: The First Virtual Reality
... me watch old 1970's television shows over and over.
For years, men have thought that there should be a way of preventing or
controlling these nightly events.
Humans must, like any animal, sleep. We do not fully understand why we
must sleep. We only know that if we are deprived of sleep long enough that we
will most certainly die. The same is true for dreams and dreaming(1). If we
sleep long enough we will reach an advanced stage of sleep where our body begins
to experience rapid eye movement (REM). It is during this REM period that we
experience most of our dreams. Many scientists try to speculate the reasons for
dreaming through biological our psychological means ...
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