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Teen Smoking

... risk of penalty of law. Recent studies show that a large percentage of teens today are getting their cigarettes from stores, mostly gas stations or convenience store. As teens continue to be able to buy their own cigarettes, more and more communities begin to impose stronger punishments on merchants who sell to the teens. One community has experienced success in their attempts to stop the sale of tobacco products to minors. Woodridge, Illinois, started a program seven years ago which forbade and strictly punished the sale of tobacco prod ...

Number of words: 276 | Number of pages: 2

Teenage Suicide

... asked how important it is for pediatricians to discuss these with their kids during checkups. The result showed that more than 66% of the parents being questioned said 29 of the 30 items were important to be discussed with their teenage children. This survey showed that American parents are somehow concerned about suicide among teenagers. This concern is pervasive among American teenagers. In 1993, a national survey of adolescents about their knowledge of, and attitudes toward, youth suicide was made. The survey reulted that 60% of the ...

Number of words: 1289 | Number of pages: 5

Epidemiology Of Varsity Sports

... athletes in many different varsity sports. For the purpose of this study, an injury has been defined as any abnormal condition that has caused an athlete to be removed from practice or competition for one or more days, because performance has been impaired (Hanes and Murray, 1982). The following statistics will deal with injuries of collegiate sports incurred by athletes involved in Men's and Women's Basketball, Baseball, Gymnastics and Track and Field, Men's Soccer, and Wrestling, and Women's Field Hockey. BASKETBALL The ...

Number of words: 1296 | Number of pages: 5

Alzheimer's Disease: "Where Has Yesterday Gone"

... or reproduce past perceptions, emotions, thoughts and actions that are so vital to live a full and functioning life. Memory is the key that unlocks doors that keep us functioning, not only mentally but physically (Corrick 32)." "Memory loss is not a sign of decay (Freedman 10)." As we get older, there is some mild impairment in our recollection of recent events, such as forgetting why one went into a room or misplacing a person's eye glasses, which even young are guilty of doing. As reported by Larry Squire, "forgetting is quite normal ...

Number of words: 2690 | Number of pages: 10

The Harm Of Illegal Drugs

... The feeling known as psychological reaction consists of redeye’s and rapid heat beat. Once people start smoking they have a hard time quitting. (false- Ms. Jost) Once people smoke it, carcinogens in it enter the lungs and spread to other organs in the body which may cause cancer or other lung diseases. “The western states have the highest percentage of users at 77%… The north eastern states are not close behind, there running at 22%. As of October, 1974, 29 million people have tried marijuana. Out of the 29 million, 12 million of ...

Number of words: 503 | Number of pages: 2

Alcoholism

... have to drink every day in order to be considered an alcoholic. Likewise, someone who drinks frequently or gets drunk every once and a while is not necessarily and alcoholic. It is possible to abuse alcohol for a short period of time without developing alcoholism. For example, some people may drink abusively during a personal crisis and then resume normal drinking. College students tend to drink more heavily than other age groups. It is often difficult to distinguish such heavy and abusive drinking from the early stages of alcoholism. How ...

Number of words: 664 | Number of pages: 3

Abortion

... life. The meeting of sperm and ovum often causes conception. Among woman without an IUD, about 50% of fertilized ova develop into a babies which are born some nine months later. The remainder are aborted or result in a miscarriage. There exists a consensus that an infant is the most precious form of life on earth, and needs to be protected under law. The philosophical and religious question behind the pro-choice/pro-life argument is: when does life become human life?. After that occurs, terminating life is a form of murder which many pe ...

Number of words: 1012 | Number of pages: 4

Kidneys

... They are loosely held in place by a mass of fat and two layers of fibrous tissue. It is believed that the kidney first evolved in the original vertebrates where freshwater organisms needed some means of pumping water from the body. The kidney became adept at reabsorbing glucose, salts, and other materials which would have been lost if simply pumped out of the body by a simple organ. The cut surface of the kidney reveals two distinct areas: the cortex- a dark band along the outer border, about one centimeter in thickness, and the inn ...

Number of words: 558 | Number of pages: 3

Should Steroids Be Banned From Society?

... Now a skinny fifteen-year-old can just walk down to the local gym and find sellers to obtain the drug that will make him the idol of all his classmates. Being such an attractive drug, as shown in the analogy above, and seeming harmless to the unaware user, steroids can have a potentially jeopardous effect. Consistently, users, new and experienced, have no knowledge to the dangerous consequences' steroids can have on their minds and bodies. Although steroids cause minimal deaths in our society, banning of steroids is purely justified becau ...

Number of words: 1801 | Number of pages: 7

Anthrax: Chemical Warfare

... That’s why it is known as " a poor man’s nuclear weapon." The effects of anthrax takes place within one to six days after inhaling the spores bacterium. A victim may think that he has a common cold, with a fever, fatigue and a cough, A couple days later he will have severe troubles breathing, sweat profusely, and his skin will turn a bluish tint. Within 24 to 36 hours after that, he’s usually dead. Anthrax can be sprayed into the air in a subway of any other public places with something as simple as an aerosol can or a pesticide sp ...

Number of words: 455 | Number of pages: 2

Diabetes

... The pancreas secretes a hormone called insulin that helps lower blood sugar and aids in the passage of glucose out of the blood cells into body cells. In type 1 , the pancreas does not produce enough insulin. This type may occur in both sexes and mainly in children, teens, or young adults. One half of all people with type 1 are under the age of 20. It is very rare in Asians, Africans, and Native Americans. This disease is hereditary, but is usually triggered by a viral infection. Some of the symptoms of type 1 are urgent thirst, exc ...

Number of words: 1110 | Number of pages: 5

Alcoholism

... causes of premature death (MEDSOC 1). Alcoholics crave and are dependent on the drug alcohol. NCADD and ASAM defines as: A primary, chronic disease with genetic, psychosocial, and environmental factors influencing its development and manifestations. The disease is often progressive and fatal. It is characterized by continuos or periodic: impaired control over drinking, preoccupation with the drug alcohol, use of alcohol despite adverse consequences, and distortions in thinking, most notably denial. (1) Vanessa Gibson, senior lect ...

Number of words: 880 | Number of pages: 4

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