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Health Essay Writing Help
How Alcohol May Affect Human Behaviour
Words: 1074 / Pages: 4 .... so because it is not
illegal and because it is so widely used.
The effects of alcohol on a individual's body vary according to: (2)
with the amount consumed.
the way the alcohol is taken.
the individual's body (size weight, health).
the individual's experience.
the individual's mood.
the circumstance in which alcohol is consumed (with food, in a social
gathering, with other drugs etc.)
The immediate effects of alcohol on an individual varies but can produce a
wide range of effects including: (2)
Loss of inhibitions.
Flushing and dizziness.
General impairment of brain and nervous system function .....
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Hemispheres Of The Brain
Words: 1736 / Pages: 7 .... human
remains that we find with incisions and piece's missing of the skull. Whether
or not these primitive surgeries were successful is unknown. The earliest way
for man to observe the brain was by noticing brain damage to a particular area
of the brain that was damaged. Such observations were first recorded some 5,000
years ago (Myers,1995). The most popular case is that of Phineas Gage a
railroad worker that had severe frontal lobe damage. This happened when a rail
road spike was shot through his head by a piece of dynamite. Miraculously he
lived through the experience, but with a severe change in his personality. From
this physiologists l .....
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The Digestive Track
Words: 333 / Pages: 2 .... stomach, which is a muscle, the food is churned about while digestive
juices pour int from glands in the stomach wall. Eventually, the the churning
action moves food out of the stomach and into the small intestine. The lever
contributes to this digestive process by secreting into the small intestine, a
liquid called bile. The pancreas secretes pancreatic juice which further aids
in dissolving food.
The small intestine undergoes continual muscular contractions called
peristalses. This action pushes food into the large intestine. This surface of
the small intestine has a large number of threadlike projections called villi.
The digested, liqui .....
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Anxiety And Depression In Afro-Americans
Words: 1502 / Pages: 6 .... exposure to violence, blacks have a greater chance to develop mental
disorders such as depression and anxiety.
Some definitions: Stress, Depression & Anxiety
Stress is everywhere in our lives and it can be found in two forms. The
life of Afro-Americans is filled with both eustress and distress, but it is the
high rate of distress due to socio-economic circumstances that are responsible
for higher rates of depression and anxiety amongst them.
Depression is an emotional state characterized by extreme sadness,
gloomy ruminations, feelings of worthlessness, loss of hope, and often
apprehension, while anxiety is a generalized feeling of fear and ap .....
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Dreaming: Function And Meaning
Words: 1359 / Pages: 5 .... from the Talmudic aphorism that
"and uninterpreted dream is like an unopened letter." There is also a third
camp occupying tltL middle ground, that believes both
of the extreme positions on the function and meaning of dreams to be
partly right and partly wrong. Its proponents argue that dreams may have
both physiological and psychological determinants, and therefore can be
either meaningful or meaningless, varying greatly in terms of psychological
significance.
Interpretation Of Dreams Revisited
If we are to understand Freud's view of the dream, we need to consider
his concept of the dreamer's brain. We know today that the nervous system
co .....
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Angina Pectoris
Words: 4452 / Pages: 17 .... In today's society, people are gaining medical knowledge at quite a fast
pace. Treatments, cures, and vaccines for various diseases and disorders are
being developed constantly, and yet, coronary heart disease remains the number
one killer in the world.
The media today concentrates intensely on drug and alcohol abuse, homicides,
AIDS and so on. What a lot of people are not realizing is that coronary heart
disease actually accounts for about 80% of all sudden deaths. In fact, the
number of deaths from heart disease approximately equals to the number of deaths
from cancer, accidents, chronic lung disease, pneumonia and influenza, and
other .....
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Marfans Syndrome
Words: 744 / Pages: 3 .... The most serious problems associated with the Marfan syndrome
involve the cardiovascular system. The two leaflets of the mitral valve may
billow backwards when the heart contracts (mitral valve prolapse). This can
lead to leakage of the mitral valve or irregular heart rhythm. In addition,
the aorta, the main artery carrying blood away from the heart, is generally
wider and more fragile in patients with the Marfan syndrome. This widening
is progressive and can cause leakage of the aortic valve or tears
(dissection) in the aorta wall. When the aorta becomes greatly widened, or
tears, surgery is necessary.
Skeletal problems common in peop .....
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Modern Technology And Medicine
Words: 684 / Pages: 3 .... became a pharmaceutical drug in 1975. The drug Captapril was a
defense against the protein PNP. PNP is an enzyme which takes out the
sugar and nitrogenous substances out of the cells. It then divides the
purine form of the sugar, making it independent and creating or destroying
in order to build more molecules such as DNA. But PNP separates anti-cancer
and other helpful agents , and destroys the therapy provided by those
agents. The goal was to create a drug which could inactivate PNP until
therapy for these agents were complete. A computer was used to create a
model of the protein in order to understand each aspect of this model .
the co .....
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Why I Believe In Voluntary Euthanasia
Words: 1874 / Pages: 7 .... Also,
we have to face the fact that the law calls all forms of self-destruction
'suicide.'
Let me point out here for those who might not know it that suicide is
no longer a crime anywhere in the English-speaking world. (It used to be,
and was punishable by giving all the dead person's money and goods to the
government.) Attempted suicide is no longer a crime, although under health
laws a person can in most states be forcibly placed in a psychiatric
hospital for three days for evaluation.
But giving assistance in suicide remains a crime, except in the
Netherlands in recent times under certain conditions, and it has never been
a crime in Swi .....
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A Career As A Paramedic
Words: 1211 / Pages: 5 .... of training and requirements, but there is constantly room for advancing, and the result of saving someones life is well worth it. A paramedic experiences much stress and sometimes trauma every day that he or she is on the job. The thrill of a paramedic is only part that you get to see, but there is much more involved in this career than you or even I know of.
The career of a Emergency Medical Technician involves saving lives. The E.M.S. is only as strong as its weakest link (Caroline,3). During the 1960’s people and associations began wondering if there was any possible way to operate a ambulance and administer pre-hospital care efficiently .....
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