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The Illegalization Of Abortion

... people have been given the right, the case is not closed. Pro-life activists carry a strong argument, and continue to push their beliefs. They feel so strongly about these beliefs that violence has broken out in some known instances. Pro-choice activists, on the other hand, also carry very strong points. They believe that the child inside them is their property and it's life doesn't be until birth. In 1973, the United States Supreme Court decided that as long as the baby lived in the womb, he or she would be the property of the mother. ...

Number of words: 1726 | Number of pages: 7

Partial-Birth Abortion And Its Affect On The American People

... been deemed one of the greatest in that particular field. The child who was just "murdered" could have seen all of these events come to pass, but instead, the child's mother had a partial-birth abortion and ended the infant's life forever. Partial-birth abortion is a topic that has caused a massive controversy in the past few years. In September, 1993, Brenda Pratt Shafer, a registered nurse with thirteen years of experience, was assigned by her nursing agency to an abortion clinic. Since Nurse Shafer considered herself to be "very pro-choi ...

Number of words: 1336 | Number of pages: 5

Anorexia And Bulimia

... often members of the middle class or affluent society, recent findings show sufferers come from all backgrounds and many different styles and sizes of families. Also there is a tendency for anorexics to set unreasonably high goals and to aim for perfection in all that they do. Generally speaking, bulimia is likely to begin after the late teens, while anorexia more often starts during adolescence. The incidence of anorexia or bulimia in males is about 5% of all cases, with the onset of the disorders generally mid-teens to early twenties. ...

Number of words: 1019 | Number of pages: 4

Euthanasia

... we are supposed to trust, and even worse, the family members themselves. A doctor is to be known as a healer, not an agent of death. A family is supposed to love and support, not kill and inherit. Every person makes the light of the world brighter. The world needs everyone1s power and contribution. It1s the power and energy of the elderly, and the strength and will of the ill, that give the world life. The light has become very dim with the crime and corruption in today1s world, we can1t afford to throw lives away because some think t ...

Number of words: 2127 | Number of pages: 8

Abortion

... legal abortion.3 The majority of churches and religious organizations in the United States support legal abortion.4 These include the United Church of God, Church of the Brethren, Lutheran Church in America, the Unitarian Universalistic Association, the American Baptist Church, the National Council of Jewish Women, Presbyterian Church in the United States, Reformed Church in America, American Friends Service Committee and the Episcopal Church.5 Even the Catholic Church, which normally opposes abortion, makes an exception when the fetu ...

Number of words: 475 | Number of pages: 2

Abortion

... and therefore accepts the murdering of unborn children. A major factor that is missing is society in today's world are moral values. If people actually had morals, then abortion might not occur. No matter what anyone argues, abortion is murder, plain and simple. How could one deny that when a doctor grabs his forceps and crushes a child's skull and sucks out what was once a brain, how could they say that is not murder, how could someone get away with doing this. Then again people ask that same question about OJ. There are many abor ...

Number of words: 621 | Number of pages: 3

Huntington's Disease

... of the parents of a child has Huntington's Disease and the other does not, the child has a 50% chance of inheriting the disease. Once it is transmitted, it is certain to develop. The disease may progress for 10 to 20 years until the patient dies. No treatment yet exists for this disease. However, in 1983 a U.S. research team announced the discovery of an identifiable segment of DNA that can be used as an indicator of the presence of the gene causing the disease. In March 1993, the journal Cell announced that the Huntington's Disease Collabor ...

Number of words: 304 | Number of pages: 2

Tumors

... have the ability to reproduce and cannot regenerate even after tissue damage. Normally, new cells are produced at a controlled rate, keeping the overall number of cells nearly constant. Feedback mechanisms that stimulate or inhibit cell division regulate the growth of normal cells. However, in some cases, the body's normal regulatory control mechanisms are unable to stop the growth of cancer cells and this causes the development of a tumor. Whether or not the tumor will be cancerous or not is determined at this point by a process called diffe ...

Number of words: 534 | Number of pages: 2

Hospice

... because it provides many benefits that aren't possible in a traditional acute or long-term health care setting. Within hospice, the family of the patient is directly involved in making decisions and helping their loved one. Hospice also gives the patient to have a great amount of control by deciding where they want to spend the rest of their lives. It can also help make choices about advanced directives which we will discuss shortly. Major Functions of the Department: Hospice is a very unique department because it truly looks at the ...

Number of words: 1953 | Number of pages: 8

James Rachels' Death And Dying

... to death or just putting him out of his misery by killing him is an ongoing struggle. If you let a person starve to death, it might be putting that person through a lot of pain but he'll still be alive (who knows, maybe a miracle cure will be found.) If you killed him on the spot with a lethal injection, it would be a more peaceful death but you would be shortening that person's life. Putting a person to death in a peaceful manner is called euthanasia. Euthanasia is an ancient word that means "easy death." There is also the issue of mora ...

Number of words: 1725 | Number of pages: 7

Assisted Suicide And Canadian Law

... In February of 1994, she ended her life with the assistance of her doctor. She suffered from a terminal illness called ALS (a.k.a. amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or Lou Gehrig's disease). The disease progressively worsens until it robs the individual of all their abilities (like walking, control of body movement, swallowing and breathing) until they are totally dependent on mechanical devices to survive. Before she ended her life, she brought the debate over assisted suicide and the right to die to the Supreme Court of British Columbia (w ...

Number of words: 226 | Number of pages: 1

Diabetes

... go up as the years go by and neew technology is developed to detect it. is the seventh leading cause of death in the United States, it causes thousands of deaths a year, 400,000 to be exact. Those who suffer from run risk of having. 1)Heart Disease 2)blindness 3)kidney failure 4)lower extremity amputainos not related to injury. and its complications happen to all Americans of any age, and of any race, and ethnic groups. This disease hits the elderly the hardest, because they don't really have anyone to take care of them. And somethimes ...

Number of words: 646 | Number of pages: 3

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