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Essays on Diseases: Top 10 Essays on Diseases

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Read this essay to learn about Diseases. After reading this essay you will learn about: 1. Infectious Diseases 2. Minamata Disease 3. Plague 4. Insect-Borne Diseases 5. Allergic Rhinitis (Hay Fever) 6. Asthma 7. Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis 8. Typhoid 9. Amoebiosis 10. Malaria.

  • Essay on Malaria.

Essay on Disease # 1. Infectious Diseases :

For most people in the world, the greatest environmental health threat continues to be pathogenic (disease- causing) organisms. Although much of our attention is focused on toxic synthetic chemicals, we also should be aware of the biological hazards to which we are exposed.

In the less developed countries, where nearly 80 per cent of the world population live, infectious agents, parasites and nutritional deficiencies still are the main cause of morbidity (illness) and mortality (death).

Gastrointestinal infections (diarrhea, dysentery and cholera) probably cause more deaths worldwide than any other group of diseases. Again, malnutrition and diarrhea create a vicious cycle. Poor nutrition makes people more susceptible to infection and infections, in turn, make it more difficult to obtain, absorb and retain food.

Improved sanitation and better nutrition could prevent most, if not all. Similar other infectious diseases like malaria, parasitic worm infections, tuberculosis and allied respiratory hazards, tetanous, etc., took lives of millions, particularly in poor nations.

Essay on Disease # 2. Minamata D isease:

It was in the early 1950s that fishermen and their families in the city of Minamata, Japan, first began to show the symptoms of what was to become known as the Minamata Disease. The first signs were loss of sensation at the extremities of the hands and feet and in areas around the mouth.

These symptoms were followed by difficulty in walking, slurred speech, reduced vision and hearing loss. Unfortunately, many persons fell prey to eventual paralysis, followed by coma and death.

Public Health Department officials were at first unable to ascertain the cause of such new disease. Similar symptoms were also reported from sea birds and cats in Minamata. Later it was evidently proved that this is a disease of Industrial Toxicity, more precisely “mercury poisoning”. This poisoning of the food chain was local and quite direct. The Chisso Corporation, a plastic manufacturer, was releasing mercury laden wastes into Minamata Bay.

The mercury—in its toxic methyl form—was then concentrated in the predatory fish through food chain of the bay ecosystem. The fisher folk were first to suffer the effect of the disease, for they subsisted largely on fish. By 1976, over 10,000 people were suffering from this disease.

Essay on Disease # 3. Plague :

Plague is often regarded as a scourge of medieval times, from which the world is now largely free. But the latest evidence suggests that incidence of the disease is on the increase. During 1995, at least 1,400 cases of human plague (including at least 50 deaths) were notified to WHO.

The disease occurs particularly in rodents. It spreads from rat to rat and from rats to humans mainly by rat fleas biting first a sick rat and then a person, thus transmitting Yersinia perstis, the bacterium of the disease.

Plague most commonly has two forms: bubonic and pneumonic. The more frequent form is bubonic, in which there is sudden onset of severe malaise, headache, shaking chills, fever and pain in the affected regional lymph nodes. Large and painful lumps appear under the skin, called buboes.

The more dangerous form of the disease is pneumonic or pulmonary plague, which affects the lungs and can be transmitted from person to person by droplets in the air from sputum discharged by the infected individuals.

Some countries in Africa, the America and Asia report cases almost every year. Madagascar, United Republic of Tanzania and Zaire in Africa; Bolivia, Brazil, Peru and the United States in the Americas, and China, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Myanmar and Vietnam in Asia.

However, cases occur in areas that had apparently been free from the disease for many decades. For example, it has reappeared in Botswana, India and Malawi in recent years after “calm” periods of up to 30 years. Peru experienced a large outbreak of plague in 1984, followed by another in 1990 and again 1992. These outbreaks are linked to cyclical epidemics of plague in rodents.

Over the last 30 years, the mean annual global plague case fatality rate has been 9 per cent, ranging from just over 14 per cent in Africa to just under 6 per cent in the Americas. These high rates persist despite the availability of highly effective drugs against the disease.

Other factors are involved in the apparent increase in plague. In the United States, for example, rapid suburbanization has resulted in increasing numbers of people living in or near areas where plague exists in nature. The number of states of that country reporting plague cases increased from three during 1944- 1953 to 13 during 1984-1994.

Surveillance of plague in rodents indicates that the disease has spread eastwards in the United States to areas believed to have been free of plague during the previous 50 years (up to 1990).

Essay on Disease # 4 . Insect-Borne Diseases :

The five main diseases spread by mosquitoes—malaria, dengue, yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis and filariasis—do not lend themselves to a single, comprehensive approach. Each has to be tackled in its own right. At the same time, however, some methods of prevention or control are common to all of them.

Vaccines against yellow fever and Japanese encephalitis already exist and others are being developed against malaria and dengue, although it will be several years at least before they become available. There is an effective drug against filariasis.

The two key measures to prevent the spread of these five diseases are the elimination of mosquito breeding places and the prevention of mosquito bites. The first involves community action, such as covering water storage containers and removing discarded containers from inside and around houses, house-to-house inspection; and control programmes using insecticide sprays.

The second involves people protecting themselves with insecticide-impregnated materials such as curtains and nets, repellents and screens.

Vector and disease surveillance are extremely important, as are rapid intervention and control when an outbreak occurs. Other important measures are health education campaigns and preparations to guard against outbreaks.

Following high-level political commitment for a Global Malaria Control Strategy made in 1992 at a Ministerial Conference in Amsterdam, a target was set for achieving a reduction in malaria mortality of at least 20 per cent by the year 2000 in at least 75 per cent affected countries.

In 1994, the United Nations General Assembly called upon WHO, as the lead agency for health, to promote the international mobilisation of technical, medical and financial assistance to intensify the struggle against malaria. But malaria resurgence in tropical countries were reported in past three decades.

Drugs such as mefloquine and halofantrine have been developed and registered and artemisinin derivatives developed and brought close to registration. In Africa, large-scale multi centre trials of the effectiveness of insecticide-treated bed nets have demonstrated a dramatic reduction in mortality of children under the age of 4. These research-based results are now being translated into operational recommendations for national control programmes.

Essay on Disease # 5 . Allergic Rhinitis (Hay Fever) :

Characteristic symptoms of hay fever, induced following exposure of the nasal mucosa to the allergen through inhalation, include profuse watery nasal discharge with sneezing, frequently accompanied by redness, irritated and watery eyes and headache.

The inciting allergens are often found in windborne plant structures called aeroallergens. The spores from fungi and even certain algae may persist through the year, especially under warm humid conditions; but particularly in temperate regions, wind-pollinated plants elicit symptoms during certain flowering periods.

In North America there are three peaks in the pattern of seasonal rhinitis: the first occurs in the spring when trees shed their pollen; the second, during the summer months, involves pollen from many grasses as well as late flowering trees and weeds; and the last peak, in the autumn, is typified by weed and secondarily by grass pollen grains. Ragweed pollen (Ambrosia) predominates during this time and is the most allergenic pollen found in North America.

In tropical areas both perennial and seasonal patterns can also be observed with this disorder. Fungal spores and grass pollen are common aeroallergens, whereas those from weeds and wind-pollinated trees are of secondary importance. However, the determination of aeroallergens in the more equatorial zones requires further study.

Although the majority of plants that induce allergic rhinitis are wind-pollinated, a number of plants that are typically pollinated by animals (insects, birds, bats) have also been implicated. For example, old- fashioned roses, which are infrequently found in gardens today, are often heavily scented and their anthers are exposed by the loose and open form of the floral bud.

Thus their attractiveness frequently used to lead to sensitization through inhalation of the pollen and the term rose-fever or rose-cold was used to describe plant-associated rhinitis.

Essay on Disease # 6 . Asthma :

Attacks of bronchial asthma are usually precipitated by inhalation of the specific allergen and this form of allergy often has a more chronic course than that seen in allergic rhinitis even though the eliciting agents may be the same. Histamine and, perhaps, serotonin, are involved in symptoms that are characterised by bronchospasm and accompanied with excessive viscid bronchial secretion, which produces the asthmatic “wheezing”.

Extrinsic asthma occurs typically in children and young adults and is often aggravated by emotional factors. It is considered to be an IgE mediated disease caused by the inhalation of aeroallergens such as pollen, spores, feathers and animal dander’s. Although not a common aeroallergen, pollen from the lodge-pole pine of Colorado (Pinus contorta) has also been known to cause bronchial asthma.

The mechanism for induction of intrinsic asthma is somewhat more obscure and is generally found in an older age group. The likely agents are allergic reactions to infectious materials, such as bacteria or viruses, or the inflammatory processes they elicit.

Unlike extrinsic asthma antigens cannot be demonstrated and thus skin testing is of no value. The separation of purely extrinsic from intrinsic asthma can be diagnostically difficult whenever allergic phenomena are combined with infectious factors.

Possibly another IgE-mediated Type I disease is the coffee bean and castor bean workers disease that is characterised by rhinitis, asthma and dermatitis following inhalation of the hapten, chlorogenic acid. As it is widespread in plants and is concentrated in coffee beans and castor beans, chlorogenic acid may act more as a universal allergen than was first suspected.

Essay on Disease # 7 . Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis :

Another type of allergic respiratory condition—known as hypersensitivity pneumonitis or extrinsic allergic alveolitis—is often associated with specific professions. In these instances, animal, vegetable or bacterial enzyme material may induce the disease.

For example, inhalation of Thermoactinomyces vulgaris or fungal spores of Microsporum faeni, which can contaminate hay, moldy sugarcane, or mushroom compost, have been causally related to farmer’s (thresher’s) lung, bagassosis and mushroom worker’s lung.

In a similar way, Cryptostroma corticale has been associated with maple bark disease of woodworkers, Penicillum caseii to cheese worker’s disease, Aspergillus clavatus and A. fumigatus to brewer’s lung disease and Graphium and Aureobasidium pullulans to sequoiosis. By inhalation of the enzyme of Bacillus subtilis, those who work with detergents may also develop an allergic pneumonitis.

Diseases produced by inhalation of airborne algae such as Gloecapsa and chlorella, are of more general incidence, however Wood and paper mill workers may also develop bronchial asthma through sawdust inhalation of the Gymnosperms, redwood (Sequoia sempervirens), western red cedar (Thuja plicata), cedar of Lebanon (cedrus libani) and the Angiosperms, iroko or African oak (Chlorophora excelsa), Nicaragua rosewood (Dalbergia retusa), and other exotic woods. The immunopathology suggests that a mixture of many types of immune or allergic reactions may be involved in extrinsic allergic alveolitis and thus is classified as Type III.

It is also possible that symptoms similar to those of allergic respiratory illness may be elicited by inhalation of airborne leaf hairs. Such a series of cases was recently reported among gardeners who had tended saplings of Oriental sycamores or the tree of Hippocrates (Platanus orientalis) at a medical school campus.

It is interesting that, about 2000 years ago, Dioscorides (40-90 AD) had noted watery eyes, sneezing, an irritating sensation in the nasal passages, soreness of the throat, an irritating dry cough and other similar symptoms. 

Essay on Disease # 8 . Typhoid:

Typhoid fever is caused by Salmonella typhosa bacteria by ingesting contaminated food or water. Symptoms are characterised by headache, nausea and loss of appetite. About 12 million people get affected by typhoid every year.

Prevention:

Typhoid can be prevented by providing access to safe drinking water, sanitation and good hygiene.

Essay on Disease # 9 . Amoebiosis:

This water borne disease is caused by Entamoeba histolytica and is characterised by liquid stools with mucus and blood, hepatitis or abscess. Man gets the infection through cut fruits, salads, vegetables, contaminated water.

E. histolytica are found as motile trophozoites or cysts. Trophozoites cause ulcer in the large intestine. Some amoebas reach liver through portal vein and may cause hepatitis or abscess. Intestinal and hepatic amoebiasis are the main manifestations of the disease. The cysts can survive for 6 to 7 weeks outside the human body, if kept moist and cool. They do not survive at moderate (50°C) temperature.

Diagnosis is based on the detection of Entamoeba histolytica in stool. The antibody of the parasite can be easily detected by Immuno-fluorescence method.

(i) Sanitary disposal of human excreta.

(ii) Drinking boiled and filtered water,

(iii) Protecting food against flies.

(iv)Washing vegetables with disinfectants by iodine solution (200 ppm) or 5% acetic acid. Cysts can be killed in milk by pasteurisation.

The drugs usually prescribed by physicians are:

i. Tnnidazole (1-2 g) to be taken one tablet for 3 days.

ii. Metronidazole (Flagyl) (400-800 mg)—one tablet thrice a day for 5 days.

iii. Furamide (500 mg)—one tablet thrice a day for 7 days.

iv. Entrozyme (250 mg)—one tablet thrice a day for 7 days.

Essay on Disease # 10. Malaria:

Malaria is caused by parasite, Plasmodium and is transmitted by female Anopheles mosquitoes. The credit of this discovery goes to Ross (Kolkata) in 1903. The symptoms are periodic paroxyms of fever, associated with shivering and terminating with sweating. Fever is intermittent and occurs after 3 or 4 days.

Control of Malaria:

(i) Destruction of mosquito by spraying with DDT and oil dissolved in freon in houses.

(ii) Destruction of mosquito larvae in water bodies by spraying with DDT or malathion.

(iii) Eliminating the breeding places in stagnant water pools by spraying with pesticides.

Antimalarial drugs are quinine, chloroquinine and camoquinine etc.

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567 Disease Research Topics & Disease Project Ideas

Are you tired of disease essay topics lists simply enumerating common illnesses? Then this article is exactly what you need! Here, you will find an outstanding list of interesting diseases to write a report on or make a presentation about.

🏆 Best Disease Topics for Project

✍️ disease essay topics for college, 👍 good disease research topics & essay examples, 🌶️ hot disease project ideas, 🎓 interesting diseases to write a report on, 📌 easy disease essay topics, 💡 simple disease essay ideas, ❓ disease research questions.

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  • Infectious Disease Prevention in the Orlando, FL The Orlando, FL public health authorities can control the spread of infectious disease by issuing travel bans, instituting entry/exit screening of travelers, quarantine travelers.
  • Cardiac Health and Disease Prevention The prevalence of cardiovascular conditions in today’s environment has become a pressing concern. Millions of people suffer from them.
  • The Ebola Virus and Disease Prevention The Ebola virus belongs to the filioviridae family in the order of mononegaviruses. The virus is single-stranded and exhibits a distinct heterogenous threadlike structure.
  • Final Care Coordination Plan: Alzheimer’s Disease Facts Care coordination serves as an essential practice in patient-centered care, targeting patients’ needs, preferences, and values and ensuring access to care and holistic treatment.
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  • Can Embryonic Stem Cells Be Used in the Treatment of Parkinson’s Disease?
  • Are Quality-Adjusted Medical Prices Declining for Chronic Disease?
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  • Can Disease-Specific Funding Harm Health?
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  • How Does Bioarchaeology Reveal the Evolution of Disease?
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  • How Did Disease Shape the History of London Between 1500 and 1900?
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  • How Are Stem Cells Changing the Way We Think About Disease?
  • Will Long-Term Periodontal Disease Causes Alzheimer’s Disease?
  • How Can Technology Cure Disease?
  • Why Has the Disease Been an Enemy of a Human Ever Since It Appeared?
  • How Will Climate Change Affect the Rates of Disease?

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StudyCorgi. (2021, September 9). 567 Disease Research Topics & Disease Project Ideas. https://studycorgi.com/ideas/disease-essay-topics/

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Bibliography

StudyCorgi . "567 Disease Research Topics & Disease Project Ideas." September 9, 2021. https://studycorgi.com/ideas/disease-essay-topics/.

StudyCorgi . 2021. "567 Disease Research Topics & Disease Project Ideas." September 9, 2021. https://studycorgi.com/ideas/disease-essay-topics/.

These essay examples and topics on Disease were carefully selected by the StudyCorgi editorial team. They meet our highest standards in terms of grammar, punctuation, style, and fact accuracy. Please ensure you properly reference the materials if you’re using them to write your assignment.

This essay topic collection was updated on June 21, 2024 .

Disease - List of Essay Samples And Topic Ideas

Diseases are medical conditions that adversely affect the functioning of organisms. In an essay on disease, one can explore various types of diseases, their causes, symptoms, and the impact they have on individuals and societies. The discussions can extend to the historical pandemics, the advancement in medical science for disease control, and the global health policies aimed at preventing and managing diseases. A vast selection of complimentary essay illustrations pertaining to Disease you can find at Papersowl. You can use our samples for inspiration to write your own essay, research paper, or just to explore a new topic for yourself.

Alzheimer’s is a Disease and the Nervous System

Alzheimer's is a disease that is associated with the Nervous System. It was discovered by Alois Alzheimer in 1906. It results in loss of memory and cognitive abilities. These cognitive declines disrupt daily life due to their severity. The following with describe the Nervous System and the several aspects of the disease itself. The Nervous System is composed of numerous complex characteristics and it enables humans to process information and a reaction based on this information. It also allows humans […]

Risk Factors from Alzheimer’s Disease

About 40 million people are affected by dementia, with the majority of these individuals being over the age of 60. This number is expected to double in the next 20 years, reaching around 80 million by 2050. Approximately 60-70% of all dementia cases are caused by Alzheimer's disease, affecting between 2.17 and 4.78 million people. Out of those, 46% have a moderate or severe form of the disease. It is estimated that by 2050, between 7.98 and 12.95 million people […]

Animal Testing: is it Ethical?

Animals being sacred gifts given to us, they are the best part of our lives and provide us with a special way of love. They do nothing but bring joy and happiness to us. My whole life I've grown up with all different kinds of animals. I've had a dog named Shelby, two cats Ruby and Smokey, a bird named Cheeks, two hamsters Bernard and Sandy, and I currently have a dog named Rocky and a rabbit named Daisy. I […]

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Alzheimer’s Disease – Disease of the Brain

Alzheimer’s disease is a type of dementia where the nerves are damaged resulting in memory loss and behavioral changes. It affects people from the age of 40 or usually 65 and it worsens with the years. Patients with Alzheimer’s disease lose thinking skills and the ability to carry out even the easiest tasks. Experts say that it is more common in women than men. The main factors involved are amyloid plaques (abnormal clumps) and neurofibrillary (tangled bundles of fibers). Dr. […]

The Physiology and Genetics Behind Alzheimer Disease

Alzheimer disease is a progressive and ultimately fatal brain disorder, in which communication between cells are halted and eventually lost. It is the most common form of dementia, and is generally (though not exclusively) diagnosed in patients over the age of 65. As communication amongst neurons is lost, symptoms such as inability to recall memories, make appropriate judgment, and proper motor function are lost and worsen over time. Affecting an estimated 2.4 million to 4.5 million Americans, with the number […]

Homelessness and Mental Illness

Research problem: Homelessness Research question: Why is the mental health population and people with disabilities more susceptible to becoming homeless? Mental health policies that underserve vulnerable people are a major cause of homelessness. The deinstitutionalization of mental hospitals, including the failure of aftercare and community support programs are linked to homelessness. Also, restrictive admission policies that keep all but the most disturbed people out of psychiatric hospitals have an effect on the rising number of homeless people. The New York […]

Main Information Regarding Alzheimer’s Disease

Introduction The disease I will be discussing is Alzheimer's Disease "AD". AD affects the brain, nervous and vascular system. As AD progresses to later stages of the disease more organ systems are affected. Alzheimer's Disease is a "progressive and irreversible neurodegenerative brain disorder that causes a significant disruption of normal brain structure and functions" Lane, Hardy, & Schott, (2018). Alzheimer's is the most common form of "Dementia", it is steady decline in cognitive, behavioral and physical abilities, that can become […]

The Terrible Childhood Disease

There are a number of terrifying diseases occurring in the United States today. Especially a ton of different child diseases. One of the scarier ones is neuroblastoma. This disease is most commonly found in children around the age of 5. With this disease, there are many different kinds of symptoms, tests, treatments, prognoses, complications, and risk factors with this disease. Neuroblastoma is something that usually effects more than one area of the body. Neuroblastoma is defined as “a cancer that […]

Economic Benefits of Euthanasia

Euthanasia is assisted suicide, it is an action taken by a doctor with consent of the patient in order to relieve immense pain and suffering. However, is the overall process of Euthanasia beneficial for the economy? Based on research, euthanasia is beneficial to the economy, and saves a vast amount of money for families for hospital stays, private insurance companies, taxpayers, and medicare each year. For a hospital stay, the average cost per inpatient day is $2,534.00 for a local […]

Liver Disease

In recent years there has been an increase in liver failure as a result of careless drinking and other inevitable causes. The treatment for these end-stage liver diseases is a liver transplant. One big challenge exists when it comes to liver transplants the number of organs donated is lower than those required. An ethical challenge arises concerning the allocation of this few organs. Should patients with liver failure due to drinking be denied liver transplants?The idea that patients with end […]

Dyslexia as a Common Disease

Dyslexia Learning to read and write can be a challenging task but imagine if you had a learning disability. This task would become much more difficult and you would have to work twice as hard as your peers. Although there are many different types of learning disabilities, this paper will be discussing the learning disability called dyslexia. The signs, causes, and treatments of dyslexia will be discussed thoroughly as well as how dyslexia affects a child's reading and writing skills. […]

Water Pollution Effects on Humans

The world population is increasing every day, bringing with it several pollution problems. Water pollution is one of the biggest examples, which generates devastating effects on human beings, such as poisoning with heavy minerals, bacterial diseases, and serious skin problems. The degree of the consequence will depend on the exposure of the person and the type of contamination that is in the water during their contact. Sometimes, the damage generated could be irreversible, concluding in chronic diseases or even death. […]

A Research Paper on Alzheimer’s Disease

Abstract In this paper, Alzheimer's disease will be delved into, investigated and dissected. This will include all that is known about the disease as much of it is unknown still, despite increasing efforts from the medical community to uncover its origin. The disease's causes, symptoms and stages will be discussed and illuminated. The effects on other body systems, its signs and symptoms and any other complications will be highlighted as well. Additionally, advancements in treating this disease are carefully examined. […]

Alzheimer’s Disease Still Alice

Alzheimer's Disease is a devastating illness which affects 30 million people worldwide. This disease develops gradually over time and worsens with every year; it destroys past memories and cognitive functions. AD impairs its victim and gradually makes them less of a person and more of a hollowed shell with no life experiences or knowledge of how to perform daily tasks (of which they can remember). Alzheimer's Disease is one of the most difficult mental illnesses a person can face; it […]

Substance Abuse and Addiction: Choice or Disease

Substance abuse and addiction will always be a hot topic, especially in the world we live. Drugs and alcohol are everywhere no matter where you live. There are those who are the occasional users and those who use all the time. Within the last year we have seen neighbors stick themselves with a needle and get high as well as receive Narcan in order to revive them. Scary to think it can be so close to home. You will find […]

Alzheimer’s Disease: Preserving Memories through Lifestyle Adjustments

Memories are made to be with us and make us happy every time we talk about it, but Alzheimer’s disease makes people forget their memories. Alzheimer’s disease is a type of dementia disease, causing an issue with memory, thinking, and behavior. There are many things cause Alzheimer ’s, but the main causing is age and some genes and gets worse and worse when people became older. Currently, there is no specific treatment and medicine for Alzheimer ’s, and the modern […]

Children Vaccination

Introduction What are vaccines? Whenever germs enter into the body of a human being, the immune system distinguishes them as external substances to the body known as antigens. The immune system then fights against the antigens through the production of the correct and rightful antibodies. Vaccines then are a weakened version of a specific antigen or virus that causes a certain disease and are weakened to the point that they cannot produce any symptom of the specific disease. However, since […]

A Chronic Inflammatory Disease Asthma

Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airways which occurs in genetically predisposed individuals. Asthma is a reactive airway disease. This common disease has an epidemic progression in western countries (Wenzel, 2003). Environmental factors are likely to be the cause of the progression of this disease. Asthma can be triggered by various stimuli and can result in either a bacterial or viral infection. Asthma occurs when inflammation constricts the airways when the lungs are reacting to physical activities, respiratory […]

Ebola: a Devastating Disease

It all began as a normal day for Macire Soumah, of Alassoya, Guinea. Busy with raising her six-year-old son, she hadn't thought much of the headaches and fatigue she had experienced over the past few days. However, this particular morning, she felt so ill that she decided to be examined by the town doctor. At her appointment, Macire was shocked to discover that she was suffering from a relatively new disease called Ebola, a disease for which there was no […]

Alzheimer’s Disease Memory and Cognition

Alzheimer's Disease (AD) affects memory and cognition. It is most common in the elderly, but symptoms may begin to show during mid-adulthood. There are three different stages of AD; mild, moderate, and severe. As we age our memory starts to diminish, we are no longer able to recognize certain places and people, we forget to do everydays tasks such as eat, shower, change, we start to present verbal problems, and odd behaviors such as disorientation and wandering. According to the […]

Research of Alzheimer’s Disease

Alzheimer's is one of the fastest working diseases. Eighty-three thousand people die each year from this disease. Two-thirds of the Alzheimer's population are women. Scientist believe that for most people, Alzheimer's is caused by a combination of genetic, lifestyle, and environmental factors. The seven stages of Alzheimer's are no impairment, very mild decline, mild decline, moderate decline, moderately severe decline, severe decline, and last is very severe decline. Education can lower your risk such as, taking classes, learning languages, and […]

Human Trafficking in the United States

Some people have a fear of heights, spiders, or even the dark but in America, the level of fear is far greater. Lions, tigers, and bears are the least of the worries for Americans due to the multiplicative issue of sex trafficking. Sex trafficking includes the purchase of women, children, and in some cases men to be used as sex slaves. Instead of recognizing victims and giving them proper assistance, United States citizens and lawmakers disavow human trafficking. Among the […]

Alzheimer’s Disease and the Symptoms

Alzheimer's disease is a common dementia that slowly causes problem with your memory and behavior. Since the symptoms are not noticeable in the beginning the disease is hard to detect. alzheimers is said to affect people who are in their middle age or old age. Alzheimers disease was discovered by german physician dr. Alois alzheimer in 1906 when he discovered changes in patients brain tissues and changes in their behavior and the patient having a difficult time recalling memories. In […]

Cardiovascular System Disorders: Heart Disease

This 63-year-old man's history revealed that his father that died from a myocardial infarction (MI) which is the result of immediate occlusion of the blood flow to the coronary vessels. The most common causes of death from an MI are decreased cardiac output, fibrillation of the heart, rupture of the heart and pooling of the blood from pulmonary edema which resulted from the increased pressure within the heart. Symptoms presented by the patient are an indication to the healthcare staff […]

I was Here: Alzheimer’s Disease

Alzheimer's is an irreversible brain disorder that destroys memory and thinking skills over time. The sickness is the most common cause of dementia and death among older people, making it one of the few diseases that are deadly for older adults in the United States. The sickness is responsible for at least 500,000 annual deaths in the Country, but it affects many more people than that. In fact, it affects us all. So many people are affected by Alzheimer's every […]

History of Ebola Virus Disease

Imagine being isolated from your own family and feeling unsure as to weather or not you will ever see them again.The don't want to go anywhere near you because you are a threat to their health, that's what The Ebola Virus does to you. Ebola Virus Disease is a severe disease that causes internal bleeding and extremely high fever.In 1976 Ebola first emerged in Sudan and Zaire. The first outbreak of ebola infected over 284 people, with a mortality rate […]

Cultural Stereotypes and Autism Disorder

“It’s the fastest growing developmental disability, autism” (Murray, 2008, p.2). “It is a complex neurological disorder that impedes or prevents effective verbal communication, effective social interaction, and appropriate behavior” (Ennis-Cole, Durodoye, & Harris, 2013). “Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a lifelong disorder that may have comorbid conditions like attention deficit disorder (ADD)/attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), anxiety disorder, stereotypical and self-stimulatory behaviors, insomnia, intellectual disabilities, obsessive compulsive disorder, seizure disorder/epilepsy, Tourette syndrome, Tic disorders, gastrointestinal problems, and other conditions. Another certainty, […]

Alzheimer’s Disease is a Growing Problem

With age comes wisdom, a growing family, and a chance to experience life in a different way. For some, growing older means being able to make more memories and share more experiences, but for others remembering those memories or experiences is only half of the struggle. What if recognizing family or enjoying the changes associated with growing older presented the challenges such as losing memories, not being able to complete simple everyday tasks, or even making decisions? These are the […]

What is Alzheimer’s Disease?

Alzheimer's is a structure of dementia that motives shrinking of the Genius in the affected person is susceptible to memory. Side effects through a large develop step through step and deteriorate after some time, getting to be extreme sufficient to block from each and every day undertakings. By large, sufferers with malady"those with the late-beginning compose"indications at first show up in their mid-60s. Early-beginning Alzheimer's occurs between a man's 30s and mid-60s and is extraordinarily uncommon. Alzheimer's sickness is the […]

Chronic Disease of Diabetes

Diabetes is a chronic disease caused by defects in insulin secretion, leading to increased blood glucose levels. It can be classified into two types: Type 1 Diabetes (T1D), caused by a deficiency of insulin, and Type 2 Diabetes (T2D), caused by insulin resistance. T2D is the most common type of diabetes, accounting for at least 90% of all cases. According to the International Diabetes Foundation, the number of people with T2D was found to increase in most countries as of […]

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An Easy Way to Write Essays on Diseases

Front view of people with medical masks coughing.

On the one hand, writing essays on diseases seems to be not that tricky. You have an opportunity to be original and even creative. Can you imagine the number of diseases that you can highlight in your disease essay? What is more, there is a lot of material available almost about every disease.

On the other hand, this great variety of ideas may confuse you. What particular disease should you choose to present in the disease essay (unless specified, of course)?

Well, there is just one thing we can advise you. Think of the disease that you are interested in most of all. Does someone you know suffer from Alzheimer’s disease? Do you have a neighbor who suffers from some kind of exotic disease? Choose whatever you want to learn more about.

Fine, you will pick a good idea for your essay on disease. What is next? Next, you need to think of how to disclose your topic. We can offer a simple plan that will help you create an informative essay on diseases.

Start with a brief overview of the chosen disease. Explain why you have selected this particular disease.

Tell about the causes of the disease, people who are more likely to have it, the main disease carriers, etc.

Describe the main symptoms of the disease in your essay. Here you can also tell about the major effects that the disease has on the human organism.

Finally, describe in your essay on disease the ways of preventing and treating it. Certainly, if you want to amaze your tutor with the essay on disease, this part of the paper should be based on the most up-to-date facts.

If you need more ideas for your essay on disease, make use of the following links: essays on alcoholism and an essay on HIV/AIDS .

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122 Communicable Disease Essay Topic Ideas & Examples

Inside This Article

Communicable diseases have been a major concern throughout human history, causing widespread illness and sometimes death. With the emergence of new diseases and the reemergence of old ones, it is crucial to understand the factors that contribute to their spread and potential strategies for prevention and control. If you are looking for an essay topic related to communicable diseases, here are 122 ideas to inspire your writing:

  • The impact of COVID-19 on global health systems.
  • The role of vaccinations in preventing communicable diseases.
  • The ethics of mandatory vaccination policies.
  • The relationship between climate change and the spread of infectious diseases.
  • The role of social media in disseminating public health information during disease outbreaks.
  • The effectiveness of quarantine measures in controlling the spread of infectious diseases.
  • The impact of globalization on the spread of communicable diseases.
  • The challenges of disease surveillance and reporting in low-income countries.
  • The role of community health workers in preventing and managing communicable diseases.
  • The impact of antimicrobial resistance on the treatment of infectious diseases.
  • The social determinants of health and their influence on communicable disease outcomes.
  • The role of government policies in preventing and controlling communicable diseases.
  • The impact of drug use on the spread of infectious diseases.
  • The relationship between poverty and the burden of communicable diseases.
  • The role of gender in communicable disease outcomes.
  • The impact of war and conflict on the spread of infectious diseases.
  • The challenges of delivering healthcare in remote and underserved areas during disease outbreaks.
  • The role of traditional healers in managing communicable diseases in indigenous communities.
  • The impact of migration on the spread of infectious diseases.
  • The relationship between urbanization and communicable disease transmission.
  • The role of water, sanitation, and hygiene in preventing communicable diseases.
  • The impact of malnutrition on susceptibility to infectious diseases.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in overcrowded prisons.
  • The relationship between animal agriculture and zoonotic diseases.
  • The role of vector-borne diseases in global health.
  • The impact of HIV/AIDS on global health systems.
  • The challenges of providing healthcare in conflict-affected areas during disease outbreaks.
  • The role of public-private partnerships in preventing and controlling communicable diseases.
  • The impact of natural disasters on communicable disease outbreaks.
  • The challenges of disease surveillance and response in refugee populations.
  • The role of education in preventing and managing communicable diseases.
  • The impact of misinformation on public health during disease outbreaks.
  • The relationship between mental health and communicable disease outcomes.
  • The challenges of managing tuberculosis in low-income countries.
  • The role of contact tracing in controlling the spread of infectious diseases.
  • The impact of drug resistance on malaria control efforts.
  • The challenges of managing emerging infectious diseases.
  • The role of cultural practices in the spread of communicable diseases.
  • The impact of climate change on the distribution of vector-borne diseases.
  • The challenges of providing healthcare to marginalized populations during disease outbreaks.
  • The role of genomics in understanding and controlling communicable diseases.
  • The impact of antimicrobial stewardship programs on reducing drug resistance.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in healthcare settings.
  • The role of travel restrictions in preventing the international spread of infectious diseases.
  • The impact of social inequality on communicable disease outcomes.
  • The challenges of managing vaccine hesitancy during disease outbreaks.
  • The role of surveillance systems in early detection and response to communicable diseases.
  • The impact of climate change on the emergence of new infectious diseases.
  • The challenges of managing sexually transmitted infections in adolescents.
  • The role of digital health technologies in preventing and controlling communicable diseases.
  • The impact of health disparities on the burden of communicable diseases.
  • The challenges of managing infectious disease outbreaks in long-term care facilities.
  • The role of behavioral interventions in preventing the spread of communicable diseases.
  • The impact of globalization on the spread of drug-resistant bacteria.
  • The challenges of managing viral hepatitis in low-income countries.
  • The role of social networks in the spread of infectious diseases.
  • The impact of climate change on the transmission of waterborne diseases.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in indigenous populations.
  • The role of mobile health applications in promoting disease prevention and control.
  • The impact of poverty on access to healthcare during disease outbreaks.
  • The challenges of managing emerging viral diseases.
  • The role of public health campaigns in preventing and controlling communicable diseases.
  • The impact of mass gatherings on the spread of infectious diseases.
  • The challenges of managing multi-drug resistant tuberculosis.
  • The role of community-based organizations in preventing and managing communicable diseases.
  • The impact of climate change on the transmission of foodborne diseases.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in humanitarian settings.
  • The role of health literacy in preventing and controlling communicable diseases.
  • The impact of social isolation on infectious disease outcomes.
  • The challenges of managing vaccine supply chains during disease outbreaks.
  • The role of telemedicine in delivering healthcare during communicable disease outbreaks.
  • The impact of urbanization on the transmission of respiratory diseases.
  • The challenges of managing neglected tropical diseases.
  • The role of traditional medicine in preventing and managing communicable diseases.
  • The impact of climate change on the spread of vector-borne diseases.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in correctional facilities.
  • The role of digital contact tracing apps in controlling the spread of infectious diseases.
  • The impact of social determinants of health on the burden of communicable diseases.
  • The challenges of managing drug-resistant malaria.
  • The role of social media influencers in promoting public health during disease outbreaks.
  • The impact of climate change on the transmission of vector-borne diseases in indigenous communities.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in post-disaster settings.
  • The role of community engagement in preventing and controlling communicable diseases.
  • The impact of health education programs on preventing the spread of infectious diseases.
  • The challenges of managing vaccine distribution in low-income countries.
  • The role of health communication strategies in promoting disease prevention and control.
  • The impact of climate change on the transmission of vector-borne diseases in urban areas.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in migrant populations.
  • The role of mobile technologies in disease surveillance and reporting.
  • The impact of social determinants of health on the vulnerability to communicable diseases.
  • The challenges of managing drug-resistant tuberculosis in resource-limited settings.
  • The role of community-based surveillance systems in preventing and controlling communicable diseases.
  • The impact of climate change on the transmission of vector-borne diseases in rural areas.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in school settings.
  • The role of public-private collaborations in developing new treatments for infectious diseases.
  • The impact of health literacy on adherence to preventive measures during disease outbreaks.
  • The challenges of managing vaccine distribution in conflict-affected areas.
  • The role of risk communication in preventing and controlling communicable diseases.
  • The impact of climate change on the transmission of vector-borne diseases in coastal regions.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in aging populations.
  • The role of mobile laboratory units in disease diagnosis and surveillance.
  • The impact of socioeconomic disparities on access to healthcare during disease outbreaks.
  • The challenges of managing drug-resistant bacterial infections.
  • The role of social marketing campaigns in promoting disease prevention and control.
  • The impact of climate change on the transmission of vector-borne diseases in mountainous regions.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in homeless populations.
  • The role of digital health records in disease surveillance and response.
  • The impact of gender inequalities on vulnerability to communicable diseases.
  • The challenges of managing vaccine distribution in remote areas.
  • The role of risk perception in influencing preventive behaviors during disease outbreaks.
  • The impact of climate change on the transmission of vector-borne diseases in agricultural communities.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in refugee camps.
  • The role of mobile diagnostic tools in early detection of infectious diseases.
  • The impact of socioeconomic disparities on healthcare-seeking behaviors during disease outbreaks.
  • The challenges of managing drug-resistant viral infections.
  • The role of social networks in promoting disease prevention and control.
  • The impact of climate change on the transmission of vector-borne diseases in arid regions.
  • The challenges of managing communicable diseases in indigenous urban populations.
  • The role of artificial intelligence in disease surveillance and prediction.
  • The impact of cultural beliefs and practices on disease prevention and control.
  • The challenges of managing vaccine distribution in geographically isolated areas.
  • The role of risk communication in addressing vaccine hesitancy during disease outbreaks.

These essay topics cover a wide range of issues related to communicable diseases, providing ample opportunities for research and analysis. Remember to choose a topic that interests you and aligns with your academic goals. Good luck with your writing!

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Students’ Essays on Infectious Disease Prevention, COVID-19 Published Nationwide

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As part of the BIO 173: Global Change and Infectious Disease course, Professor Fred Cohan assigns students to write an essay persuading others to prevent future and mitigate present infectious diseases. If students submit their essay to a news outlet—and it’s published—Cohan awards them with extra credit.

As a result of this assignment, more than 25 students have had their work published in newspapers across the United States. Many of these essays cite and applaud the University’s Keep Wes Safe campaign and its COVID-19 testing protocols.

Cohan, professor of biology and Huffington Foundation Professor in the College of the Environment (COE), began teaching the Global Change and Infectious Disease course in 2009, when the COE was established. “I wanted very much to contribute a course to what I saw as a real game-changer in Wesleyan’s interest in the environment. The course is about all the ways that human demands on the environment have brought us infectious diseases, over past millennia and in the present, and why our environmental disturbances will continue to bring us infections into the future.”

Over the years, Cohan learned that he can sustainably teach about 170 students every year without running out of interested students. This fall, he had 207. Although he didn’t change the overall structure of his course to accommodate COVID-19 topics, he did add material on the current pandemic to various sections of the course.

“I wouldn’t say that the population of the class increased tremendously as a result of COVID-19, but I think the enthusiasm of the students for the material has increased substantially,” he said.

To accommodate online learning, Cohan shaved off 15 minutes from his normal 80-minute lectures to allow for discussion sections, led by Cohan and teaching assistants. “While the lectures mostly dealt with biology, the discussions focused on how changes in behavior and policy can solve the infectious disease problems brought by human disturbance of the environment,” he said.

Based on student responses to an introspective exam question, Cohan learned that many students enjoyed a new hope that we could each contribute to fighting infectious disease. “They discovered that the solution to infectious disease is not entirely a waiting game for the right technologies to come along,” he said. “Many enjoyed learning about fighting infectious disease from a moral and social perspective. And especially, the students enjoyed learning about the ‘socialism of the microbe,’ how preventing and curing others’ infections will prevent others’ infections from becoming our own. The students enjoyed seeing how this idea can drive both domestic and international health policies.”

A sampling of the published student essays are below:

Alexander Giummo ’22 and Mike Dunderdale’s ’23  op-ed titled “ A National Testing Proposal: Let’s Fight Back Against COVID-19 ” was published in the Journal Inquirer in Manchester, Conn.

They wrote: “With an expansive and increased testing plan for U.S. citizens, those who are COVID-positive could limit the number of contacts they have, and this would also help to enable more effective contact tracing. Testing could also allow for the return of some ‘normal’ events, such as small social gatherings, sports, and in-person class and work schedules.

“We propose a national testing strategy in line with the one that has kept Wesleyan students safe this year. The plan would require a strong push by the federal government to fund the initiative, but it is vital to successful containment of the virus.

“Twice a week, all people living in the U.S. should report to a local testing site staffed with professionals where the anterior nasal swab Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) test, used by Wesleyan and supported by the Broad Institute, would be implemented.”

Kalyani Mohan ’22 and Kalli Jackson ’22 penned an essay titled “ Where Public Health Meets Politics: COVID-19 in the United States ,” which was published in Wesleyan’s Arcadia Political Review .

They wrote: “While the U.S. would certainly benefit from a strengthened pandemic response team and structural changes to public health systems, that alone isn’t enough, as American society is immensely stratified, socially and culturally. The politicization of the COVID-19 pandemic shows that individualism, libertarianism and capitalism are deeply ingrained in American culture, to the extent that Americans often blind to the fact community welfare can be equivalent to personal welfare. Pandemics are multifaceted, and preventing them requires not just a cultural shift but an emotional one amongst the American people, one guided by empathy—towards other people, different communities and the planet. Politics should be a tool, not a weapon against its people.”

Sydnee Goyer ’21 and Marcel Thompson’s ’22  essay “ This Flu Season Will Be Decisive in the Fight Against COVID-19 ” also was published in Arcadia Political Review .

“With winter approaching all around the Northern Hemisphere, people are preparing for what has already been named a “twindemic,” meaning the joint threat of the coronavirus and the seasonal flu,” they wrote. “While it is known that seasonal vaccinations reduce the risk of getting the flu by up to 60% and also reduce the severity of the illness after the contamination, additional research has been conducted in order to know whether or not flu shots could reduce the risk of people getting COVID-19. In addition to the flu shot, it is essential that people remain vigilant in maintaining proper social distancing, washing your hands thoroughly, and continuing to wear masks in public spaces.”

An op-ed titled “ The Pandemic Has Shown Us How Workplace Culture Needs to Change ,” written by Adam Hickey ’22 and George Fuss ’21, was published in Park City, Utah’s The Park Record .

They wrote: “One review of academic surveys (most of which were conducted in the United States) conducted in 2019 found that between 35% and 97% of respondents in those surveys reported having attended work while they were ill, often because of workplace culture or policy which generated pressure to do so. Choosing to ignore sickness and return to the workplace while one is ill puts colleagues at risk, regardless of the perceived severity of your own illness; COVID-19 is an overbearing reminder that a disease that may cause mild, even cold-like symptoms for some can still carry fatal consequences for others.

“A mandatory paid sick leave policy for every worker, ideally across the globe, would allow essential workers to return to work when necessary while still providing enough wiggle room for economically impoverished employees to take time off without going broke if they believe they’ve contracted an illness so as not to infect the rest of their workplace and the public at large.”

Women's cross country team members and classmates Jane Hollander '23 and Sara Greene '23

Women’s cross country team members and classmates Jane Hollander ’23 and Sara Greene ’23 wrote a sports-themed essay titled “ This Season, High School Winter Sports Aren’t Worth the Risk ,” which was published in Tap into Scotch Plains/Fanwood , based in Scotch Plains, N.J. Their essay focused on the risks high school sports pose on student-athletes, their families, and the greater community.

“We don’t propose cutting off sports entirely— rather, we need to be realistic about the levels at which athletes should be participating. There are ways to make practices safer,” they wrote. “At [Wesleyan], we began the season in ‘cohorts,’ so the amount of people exposed to one another would be smaller. For non-contact sports, social distancing can be easily implemented, and for others, teams can focus on drills, strength and conditioning workouts, and skill-building exercises. Racing sports such as swim and track can compete virtually, comparing times with other schools, and team sports can focus their competition on intra-team scrimmages. These changes can allow for the continuation of a sense of normalcy and team camaraderie without the exposure to students from different geographic areas in confined, indoor spaces.”

Brook Guiffre ’23 and Maddie Clarke’s ’22  op-ed titled “ On the Pandemic ” was published in Hometown Weekly,  based in Medfield, Mass.

“The first case of COVID-19 in the United States was recorded on January 20th, 2020. For the next month and a half, the U.S. continued operating normally, while many other countries began their lockdown,” they wrote. “One month later, on February 29th, 2020, the federal government approved a national testing program, but it was too little too late. The U.S. was already in pandemic mode, and completely unprepared. Frontline workers lacked access to N-95 masks, infected patients struggled to get tested, and national leaders informed the public that COVID-19 was nothing more than the common flu. Ultimately, this unpreparedness led to thousands of avoidable deaths and long-term changes to daily life. With the risk of novel infectious diseases emerging in the future being high, it is imperative that the U.S. learn from its failure and better prepare for future pandemics now. By strengthening our public health response and re-establishing government organizations specialized in disease control, we have the ability to prevent more years spent masked and six feet apart.”

In addition, their other essay, “ On Mass Extinction ,” was also published by Hometown Weekly .

“The sixth mass extinction—which scientists have coined as the Holocene Extinction—is upon us. According to the United Nations, around one million plant and animal species are currently in danger of extinction, and many more within the next decade. While other extinctions have occurred in Earth’s history, none have occurred at such a rapid rate,” they wrote. “For the sake of both biodiversity and infectious diseases, it is in our best interest to stop pushing this Holocene Extinction further.”

An essay titled “ Learning from Our Mistakes: How to Protect Ourselves and Our Communities from Diseases ,” written by Nicole Veru ’21 and Zoe Darmon ’21, was published in My Hometown Bronxville, based in Bronxville, N.Y.

“We can protect ourselves and others from future infectious diseases by ensuring that we are vaccinated,” they wrote. “Vaccines have high levels of success if enough people get them. Due to vaccines, society is no longer ravaged by childhood diseases such as mumps, rubella, measles, and smallpox. We have been able to eradicate diseases through vaccines; smallpox, one of the world’s most consequential diseases, was eradicated from the world in the 1970s.

“In 2000, the U.S. was nearly free of measles, yet, due to hesitations by anti-vaxxers, there continues to be cases. From 2000–2015 there were over 18 measles outbreaks in the U.S. This is because unless a disease is completely eradicated, there will be a new generation susceptible.

“Although vaccines are not 100% effective at preventing infection, if we continue to get vaccinated, we protect ourselves and those around us. If enough people are vaccinated, societies can develop herd immunity. The amount of people vaccinated to obtain herd immunity depends on the disease, but if this fraction is obtained, the spread of disease is contained. Through herd immunity, we protect those who may not be able to get vaccinated, such as people who are immunocompromised and the tiny portion of people for whom the vaccine is not effective.”

Dhruvi Rana ’22 and Bryce Gillis ’22 co-authored an op-ed titled “ We Must Educate Those Who Remain Skeptical of the Dangers of COVID-19 ,” which was published in Rhode Island Central .

“As Rhode Island enters the winter season, temperatures are beginning to drop and many studies have demonstrated that colder weather and lower humidity are correlated with higher transmissibility of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19,” they wrote. “By simply talking or breathing, we release respiratory droplets and aerosols (tiny fluid particles which could carry the coronavirus pathogen), which can remain in the air for minutes to hours.

“In order to establish herd immunity in the US, we must educate those who remain skeptical of the dangers of COVID-19.  Whether community-driven or state-funded, educational campaigns are needed to ensure that everyone fully comprehends how severe COVID-19 is and the significance of airborne transmission. While we await a vaccine, it is necessary now more than ever that we social distance, avoid crowds, and wear masks, given that colder temperatures will likely yield increased transmission of the virus.”

Danielle Rinaldi ’21 and Verónica Matos Socorro ’21 published their op-ed titled “ Community Forum: How Mask-Wearing Demands a Cultural Reset ” in the Ewing Observer , based in Lawrence, N.J.

“In their own attempt to change personal behavior during the pandemic, Wesleyan University has mandated mask-wearing in almost every facet of campus life,” they wrote. “As members of our community, we must recognize that mask-wearing is something we are all responsible and accountable for, not only because it is a form of protection for us, but just as important for others as well. However, it seems as though both Covid fatigue and complacency are dominating the mindsets of Americans, leading to even more unwillingness to mask up. Ultimately, it is inevitable that this pandemic will not be the last in our lifespan due to global warming creating irreversible losses in biodiversity. As a result, it is imperative that we adopt the norm of mask-wearing now and undergo a culture shift of the abandonment of an individualistic mindset, and instead, create a society that prioritizes taking care of others for the benefit of all.”

Dollinger

Shayna Dollinger ’22 and Hayley Lipson ’21  wrote an essay titled “ My Pandemic Year in College Has Brought Pride and Purpose. ” Dollinger submitted the piece, rewritten in first person, to Jewish News of Northern California . Read more about Dollinger’s publication in this News @ Wesleyan article .

“I lay in the dead grass, a 6-by-6-foot square all to myself. I cheer for my best friend, who is on the stage constructed at the bottom of Foss hill, dancing with her Bollywood dance group. Masks cover their ordinarily smiling faces as their bodies move in sync. Looking around at friends and classmates, each in their own 6-by-6 world, I feel an overwhelming sense of normalcy.

“One of the ways in which Wesleyan has prevented outbreaks on campus is by holding safe, socially distanced events that students want to attend. By giving us places to be and things to do on the weekends, we are discouraged from breaking rules and causing outbreaks at ‘super-spreader’ events.”

An op-ed written by Luna Mac-Williams ’22 and Daëlle Coriolan ’24 titled “ Collectivist Practices to Combat COVID-19 ” was published in the Wesleyan Argus .

“We are embroiled in a global pandemic that disproportionately affects poor communities of color, and in the midst of a higher cultural consciousness of systemic inequities,” they wrote. “A cultural shift to center collectivist thought and action not only would prove helpful in disease prevention, but also belongs in conversation with the Black Lives Matter movement. Collectivist models of thinking effectively target the needs of vulnerable populations including the sick, the disenfranchised, the systematically marginalized. Collectivist systems provide care, decentering the capitalist, individualist system, and focusing on how communities can work to be self-sufficient and uplift our own neighbors.”

An essay written by Maria Noto ’21 , titled “ U.S. Individualism Has Deadly Consequences ,” is published in the Oneonta Daily Star , based in Oneonta, N.Y.

She wrote, “When analyzing the cultures of certain East Asian countries, several differences stand out. For instance, when people are sick and during the cold and flu season, many East Asian cultures, including South Korea, use mask-wearing. What is considered a threat to freedom by some Americans is a preventive action and community obligation in this example. This, along with many other cultural differences, is insightful in understanding their ability to contain the virus.

“These differences are deeply seeded in the values of a culture. However, there is hope for the U.S. and other individualistic cultures in recognizing and adopting these community-centered approaches. Our mindset needs to be revolutionized with the help of federal and local assistance: mandating masks, passing another stimulus package, contact tracing, etc… However, these measures will be unsuccessful unless everyone participates for the good of a community.”

Madison Szabo '23, Caitlyn Ferrante '23

A published op-ed by Madison Szabo ’23 , Caitlyn Ferrante ’23 ran in the Two Rivers Times . The piece is titled “ Anxiety and Aspiration: Analyzing the Politicization of the Pandemic .”

John Lee ’21 and Taylor Goodman-Leong ’21 have published their op-ed titled “ Reassessing the media’s approach to COVID-19 ” in Weekly Monday Cafe 24 (Page 2).

An essay by Eleanor Raab ’21 and Elizabeth Nefferdorf ’22 titled “ Preventing the Next Epidemic ” was published in The Almanac .

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Essay Samples on Disease

Multiple sclerosis: chronicle immune disease analysis.

Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is an incurable, chronic disease of the immune system and central nervous system that commonly affects the brain, optic nerve, and spinal cord with varying degrees of severity. According to an article by Guillamó et. al., MS affects approximately 2.3 million people...

  • Mental Disorder
  • Multiple Sclerosis

Diagnostic Requirement for Hypertension and Immune System

Hypertension is one of the most prevalent conditions affecting people in the 21st century, it is one of the most frequently diagnosed conditions in the western world and when left untreated can cause serious effects to a person’s quality of life. Hypertension can act as...

  • Hypertension
  • Immune System

The Efficiency Of Measles Awareness Programs And Methods Of Disease Prevention

According to the CDC, there are 29 states here in the U.S. that have reported confirmed cases of measles as of the 3rd of July this year so far, and growing. (CDC, 2019) We are going to look at some programs and preventative measures that...

  • Vaccination

Symptoms Of Muscular Dystrophy And Types Of The Disorder

Muscular dystrophies (MDs) are a group of genetic diseases with progressive skeletal muscle weakness and decrease muscle function. There are different types of muscular dystrophy. They share similar characteristics such as being hereditary, progressive and weakness. According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and...

  • Muscular Dystrophy

Impacts Of The Measles Outbreak In Koinadugu/falaba And Pujehun Districts

Introduction Measles is a disease caused by a virus called paramyxovirus. It is a vaccine-preventable disease and children who are unvaccinated are more susceptible to acquiring diseases1. The virus is spread through contact with nose and throat secretions of infected people and through airborne droplets...

  • Epidemiology

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Symptoms Of Narcolepsy, Its Epidemiology And Means Of Management

Narcolepsy is a neurological disease that affects sleep and the state of being awake. Individuals with Narcolepsy know-how excessive daylight hours drowsiness and intermittent, uncontrollable episodes of falling asleep in the course of the daytime. Those unforeseen sleep assaults ought to arise for the duration...

The Contribution of Louis Pasteur to the Science Field

Chicken pox, pasteurization, rabies and silk germs are all deadly diseases that are fatal and life threatening, but who discovered and/ or cured them. That man is louis Pasteur. Louis Pasteur is a French biologist born on the 27 December 1822 in Dion, France. His...

The Correlation of Type 2 Diabetes and Parasitosis

Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is endocrine and metabolic disorder, characterized by persistent hyperglycemia [1]. It has attracted much caution, due to high incidence, mortality and inescapable complications [1-5]. Globally, T2DM represents approximately 90% of diabetes in adults [1], in addition, the number of T2DM...

Evaluation of Micro-RNA199 in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus 

Determining the cause of LN will help in early detection and provide better therapeutic intervention to improve clinical outcomes (Ajmani et al., 2018), however the prediction of LN in SLE patient is challenging. In general, increased self-production and deposition of antibodies and altered immune responses...

Yellow Fever’s Re-Emergence: Preventing The Next Pandemic

Abstract Yellow fever kills 30,000 annually. Yet large outbreaks are entirely preventable as vaccines have been available for decades. Through complacency there is now a risk of it spreading to Asia. The WHO has a new strategy to eliminate future outbreaks. Introduction The scourge of...

  • Yellow Fever

The Diagnosis, Signs and Symptoms of the Measles

Measles have been prevalent in recent times, despite the eradication of the disease because of the mandated vaccination. Statistics have shown that “as of April 26, 2019, The Center of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) had reported seven hundred and four (704) cases of measles...

Osteoporosis Diseases and Their Effects on Women

Ailing health in our nation is the national issue. Money related limitations, nourishment deficiencies, absence of sustenance learning and superstition are the primary reasons. Moms and kids are the basic and toxic casualties of lack of healthy sustenance. The individual's most loved is his life....

  • Osteoporosis

Treatment Method Recommendations of Osteoporosis Patients

The study aims to examine the recent researches on the pharmacogenetics of osteoporosis, assess the evaluations conducted on previous researches, give alternatives to availability of drugs, lessen the unpredicted harmful effects and costs of the current drugs, and enhance the human life. Method & Results...

Methods of an Early Osteoporosis Diagnosis

 As of 2014, fifty-four million Americans had reported low bone density. Of these fifty-four million people, approximately ten million of them had been diagnosed with osteoporosis. Osteoporosis is a disease which simply means ‘porous bone’ and occurs when a person’s bones significantly lose mass and...

Ginger and Ginger Powder Against Cold and Flu

Ginger has some outstanding health advantages. It contributes to the treatment of several diseases and anomalies. Ginger is an effective home remedy for many diseases because of the enormous medicinal value. Ginger also has high nutrients and is spiced with consonants, which adds food delicacy....

The Importance of Alzheimer's Disease Research

“All I can hope for is a cure for Alzheimer’s disease is found. My grandmother has it, and her mom did, as well. Chances are good that both my mom and I will eventually be diagnosed. And I don’t even want to think about my...

  • Alzheimer's Disease

Movie Analysis of Rent: Showcasing The Life of AIDS Infected Patients

I chose to watch the movie RENT because I wanted to educate myself more on how people live with HIV+/AIDS. I wanted to learn more about where these diseases came from, how long has it been around for, can you live a normal life, and...

An Overview of Yellow Fever, A Dangerous African and South American Disease

Yellow fever virus belongs to Flaviviridae family. It is acute febrile vector borne disese that occur in Africa and South america. Last century there was an large epidemics in Caribbean and North america and in Ethiopia in 1960- 1962. There are seven genotypes of virus,...

The Symptoms of Q Fever, A Rare Deadly Disease

In September of 2014 my grandma was diagnosed with a semi deadly disease known as Q Fever. She was flown out to UK hospital after having a seizure. She was transferred only once to a slightly smaller hospital after getting out of ICU. At the...

Atherosclerosis and Particulate Matter's Effects on Human Health

Arteriosclerosis is a condition that occurs when the blood vessels that carry oxygen and nutrients from your heart to the rest of your body which are also known as arteries become thick and stiff. This sometimes restricts blood flow to organs and tissues. When the...

  • Atherosclerosis

How Human Bodies Developed Lactose Intolerance

Lactose persistence is something that we covered in class briefly, though it is something I found to be interesting. Even though most people are lactose intolerant, they still consume dairy anyways. The reason for that is because the consequences, such as bloating or diarrhea, are...

  • Lactose Intolerance

Possible Solutions to Lactose Intolerance

Over 70% people world-wide are lactose intolerant (Forsgård, 2019). The levels of severity can differ from one person to another, some people could even live there whole life without knowing they are lactose intolerant. There are two main causes of this disease which are: decrease...

Types Of Stroke And Lifestyle To Overcome It

Stroke likewise called a brain attack is a brain injury that is brought about by an abrupt disruption of blood supply to the cerebrum (brain). It happens when part of the cerebrum does not get the required blood flow for one of two reasons: either...

Types Of Stroke And Symptoms That Indicate Them

There are two main types of strokes, an ischemic or a hemorrhagic. “In hemorrhage, too much blood is contained within the closed cranial cavity; in ischemia, too little blood is available to meet the oxygen and nutrient need for an area within the brain.” Intracranial...

Circuit Training Is Effective For People With Stroke

Introduction Stroke also referred to as the Cerebral vascular Accident (CVA) is defined to a as sudden non-convulsive focal neurological deficit of vascular origin lasting more than 24 hours (WHO, 2017). According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 15 million people are affected by stroke...

Features Of Rehabilitation Of Patients After A Stroke

Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA) also known as stroke occurs when blood flow to an area of the brain is damaged or destroyed, depriving brain tissue of oxygen and nutrients (Staff, 2019). Qualities for Caring Patient with CVA Good communication – Good communication is key to all...

Report About Dengue Fever: Symptoms & Control Measures

This report investigates the conditions that result in mosquito bourne illnesses being a threat to Far North Queensland and the steps taken to control and reduce the risks of contracting dengue fever. Dengue fever is a disease that is very infectious and its spreading is...

  • Dengue Fever

Household Based Survey On Awareness of Dengue Fever

Introduction “If you think you are too small to make a difference, try sleeping with a mosquito”. According to WHO, more than 40% of the world population are in danger of dengue. Dengue is a life threatening mosquito borne viral disease among humans. It is...

Dengue Fever As Infected Blood Product

So I decided to choose Dengue Fever (also known as DENgee) as my topic for this research because as we all know this fever is very viral and killing many people across the globe. If you look at the data about this virus and number...

Cerebral Palsy and It Affects On Children

Cerebral palsy affects a child’s brain when they’re simply one month old. You may think that it’s just one disorder, but in reality, it’s many disorders all under one name. CP affects muscle tone, movement and/or posture as well as sight and hearing. It also...

  • Cerebral Palsy

Cerebral Palsy Is A Damage To The Brain

Some people said that a cerebral palsy is considered a curse. So, whatever it is. In fact, over 17 million people in worldwide included Australia and US are challenged by this disease or reported prevalence estimates CP form 1.5 to more than 4 per 1000...

Cerebral palsy: definition, effects on person’s life and therapeutic management

Cerebral palsy is defined as, a group of permanent disorders affecting the movement and posture, and a person’s ability to maintain balance; these disturbances can appear fetal development or the infant brain and is the, “most common physical disability of children” (Wong’s 2015). Most often...

Appearing Obstacles in Disease Treatment of Various Plagues and Outbreaks

Throughout the history of mankind, humans are faced with various diseases in every phase of their history. From biblical plagues of ancient times to AIDS of modern day, fatal diseases have always been a headache for human race. The continual expansion of human population has...

Description And Reason Of Insomnia

Insomnia is best described as the difficulty of falling and/or staying asleep. Insomnia can happen many times during a week and is consistent to at least 3 months. Insomnia can affect anybody, however it is more common in adults, specifically older women. Insomnia affects your...

  • Lack of Sleep

Spanish Flu Pandemic And Healthcare Development

This investigation will be on the topic of the Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918. This virus spread across the Americas and Europe, leaving a path of destruction behind it. The question that will be investigated is: How did the Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918 aid...

The Influence of Insomnia on Developing Neurodegenerative Disorders

A 66 year old man came to the neurology clinic with complains of “slowness” and gradually progressive memory loss over the last 2 years. On examination, he was found to have slow finger tapping in both hands, right sided upper limb rigidity and a shuffling...

Management of Spread of Infectious Diseases in the Capital Cities

Introduction Tokyo is the capital city of Japan, and has been considered as the urban centre which is the largest in the world. In the year 1853, Matthew C.Perry who was the Navy commodore of United States sailed into the Bay of Tokyo with his...

  • Infectious Disease

Hearing Loss and the Evolution of Children

Hearing is an important aspect of our everyday lives. If there is some sort of damage to either one’s outer ear, middle ear, or inner ear, hearing loss can arise. Hearing loss can occur both at the time of birth or over time as a...

  • Hearing Loss

Risk Factors of Congenital Hearing Loss

Congenital hearing loss means hearing loss that is present in an infant at birth. There are case reports of 2 to 4 infants in a thousand are born with sensorineural hearing impairment, making congenital permanent hearing loss the most frequently occurring birth defect (De Leenheer...

Hearing Loss, Its Causes and Prevention

One of the less frequently asked questions, for obvious reasons which is it is something seem to be not so vital. Until it happens to you which will be too late. I can confidently say I am very fortunate to be part of the masses...

The Dangers of Malaria and Its Transmittant Genus Plasmodium

Introduction The World Health Organization reports that of the top 10 causes of death in low-income countries Malaria ranked at position 6, with an alarming crude death rate of 45,000 per 100,000 of the population. 1. Malaria is a life-threatening mosquito-borne parasitic infection with protozoa...

Research on Malaria: Analysis of Sociological and Cultural Factors

Introduction For this assignment, I have opted to focus on malaria due to my limited familiarity with the disease. I perceive this as an opportunity to acquire a comprehensive understanding of the subject, and I commenced by compiling a concise list of areas and topics...

Tuberculosis Infection and Disease and Its Link to Poverty

Introduction A 28 years old male patient come with the complaint of cough, shortness of breath and high grade fever since from last 2 weeks admitted in private ward with a preventive isolation. He was diagnosed with tuberculosis. He was a chain smoker smoking almost...

  • Tuberculosis

Diseases Present in the Dinosaur´s Bodies

Dinosaurs remain to transfix us. Every now and then, we discover a petrifaction that reveals some new facts about their lives—for example, their diets, injuries, or habitats. However, some fossils also reveal proof of diseases that feigned dinosaurs. Yes, these animals had their own illnesses,...

Intentional Tanning and Its Impact on Skin Cancer

Introduction Tanning outside or inside can have perilous outcomes. While regularly connected with great wellbeing, the 'sparkle' of a tan is the extremely inverse of sound; its proof of DNA damage to your skin. Tanning harms your skin cells and accelerates unmistakable indications of maturing....

  • Skin Cancer

Wearable and Detection of Skin Cancer Analysis Using

Abstract Skin cancer rates have been increasing for the past few decades. The risk factor is the direct exposure of skin lesions to UV radiation which causes various skin diseases. Skin cancers are most common disease and are deadly to the human. Early detection of...

Prevention and Treatment of Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Respiratory Distress syndrome has been one of the most challenging diseases that clinicians have had troubled managing in pediatrics patients. One of the challenges that clinicians have encountered with is proving the proper treatment strategies since pediatrics have several differences than an adult does within....

  • Respiratory System

The Known Benefits and Consequences of Genetically Modified Food

Around the world, there has been a difference of opinions on the idea of modified foods. Since modified foods have only been recently introduced, people are skeptical about modified foods being beneficial to one’s health long term wise or not. Throughout the world, there are...

  • Genetic Engineering
  • Genetically Modified Food

Prevention of AIDS by Lifting the Stigma

Imagine living in the 1980’s when the HIV/AIDS epidemic started, having HIV back then was a death sentence, and that is how it was seen by everyone in the general public. Then, over time medicine and treatments would become more available, and people suffering from...

Pancreatitis: Digestive Disorder and Its Effect on Digestion System

Pancreatitis is a digestive disorder or disease which affects the pancreas making it inflamed (Hart, Zen, Chari, 2015). Pancreases damage occurs when some of the enzymes of the digestive system are activated before being released in the small intestines where they are supposed to be...

  • Digestive System

Breast Cancer: Diagnosis and Ways to Fight and Support the Cause

What Is Breast Cancer? Breast cancer is a form of cancer most common in women, but can also affect men, were cells in the breast tissue become mutated and multiply. This most commonly occurs in cells around the milk ducts and glands. In the first...

  • Breast Cancer

Endocrine Diseases In Patients Admitted To Endocrinology Ward

Introduction Endocrine system is a system of specialized glands called endocrine glands that secrete hormones into the blood and via blood travel to tissues and organs all over the body. The endocrine glands consist of pineal, pituitary, thyroid and parathyroids, thymus, adrenals, pancreas, ovaries and...

  • Homeostasis

Treatment And Prognosis Of High-Grade Gliomas: Temozolomide Vs. Standard PCV

Cancer is an unforgiving disease that can ravage the human body and one of the most abysmal forms includes: brain cancer. Tumors of the brain can be classified as either primary or secondary, where primary brain tumors originate in the brain and secondary tumors develop...

Observational Investigations In Disease Transmission Article Analysis

Abstract The plan this studies to find the association between prehypertension, cardiovagal modulation, oxidative stress, and associated CV risk factors. The exploration title mirrors the examination point and populace being contemplated however could be better if consider configuration was additionally included as suggestion of strobe...

  • Universal Health Care

The Relationship Between Illness & Person’s Identity

Bibliographical disruption of illness can be understood as how illness affects a person’s identity, social life and how you view yourself (Sontag, 1979). The essay will be focusing on greater sense of those identities with which illness may interact, including the way such identities may...

  • Personal Identity

Aggressive Central Giant Cell Granuloma – Five Cases With Review

Abstract Central Giant Cell Granuloma (CGCG)of the maxillofacial region generally present as an asymptomatic slowly growing localised disease to aggressive neoplasm like rapid expansive progression typically present with localised disease. It is an uncommon benign lesion with a low incidence that occurs in the craniofacial...

  • Public Health

Parkinson’s Disease: Signs, Causes, Effects And Treatment

Introduction: Parkinson’s disease, known as PD, is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that affects motor ability. Parkinson's disease causes internal and external change that targets and kills the cells responsible for producing dopamine, a chemical involved in sending messages to the brain in order for the...

  • Parkinson's Disease

The Concept And Principles Of Nutrigenomics

Over the past several decades, nutrionists along with government agencies such as the FDA have tried to come up with ways for Americans to live a healthier life free of disease. Whether that be through the food pyramid, MyPlate, or RDA’s; they have tried to...

The Effects Of Exercising On The Degradation Of Knee Cartilage Of The Elderly

Nowadays people suffer from different ailments then earlier in time. Most of these ailments are in relationship with ageing. Such as osteoarthritis of the cartilage in the knee. Which will be discussed in this report. Packed in the question ‘What is the effect of exercise...

The Features and Risks of Viral Warts

Warts Warts are benign skin growths that show when a virus affects the epidermis layer of skin. They are contagious. There are many different types of warts and each are different in their own way. Zur Hausen looked for viruses in human genital warts, leading...

The Significance of Clinical Microbiology to Human Health

Clinical microbiology is the centerpiece of infectious disease diagnosis, as well as the cornerstone of infection control and prevention (Wolk, 2009). The function of this department is to study the role of microorganisms such as bacteria, fungi, viruses, parasites, and the diseases that they cause...

  • Microbiology

Clostridium Difficile Infection In Health-Care Workers

Since healthcare settings differ greatly in terms of their day-to-day functioning, it is hard to come up with a management proposal that would fit all facilities. Therefore, all healthcare facilities should conduct infection prevention risk assessment on a regular basis alongside adoption of detailed protocols...

Analysis Of The Biomarkers Found In Different Pulpal And Periradicular Diseases

Introduction A vital tooth presents, intact blood supply which in turn maintains nutrition, innervations and immune competency. An assault on pulpo-dentinal component results in an inflammatory reaction, leading to either repair or pulp degeneration. Various vital pulp therapies, like indirect/direct pulp capping, pulpotomy, and partial...

Asperger's Disorder And An Absence Of Tom

In 1994 Asperger's disorder turned into an analysis in its own right and was viewed as the highest working condition in the autistic range of disarranges. Taking note of that a portion of the important side effects of Asperger's, orderly conduct, want for equality, are...

Asperger's Is My First Language

I used to pretend that I was just passing through this family on my way to my real one. It wasn't too much of a stretch, really—there was my brother Mikey, the spitting image of my Dad in personality and math skills; and my sisters,...

Coping With A Chronic Health Condition

The student nurse took care of a 59 year-old Caucasian female on September 11, 2018. The patient was admitted to the emergency department with a diagnosis of ascites. The patient had a history of diabetes, cirrhosis, hypertension, kidney failure, splenomegaly, and major depression. The patient...

  • Alternative Medicine

Health Is The Key To A Happy Life

Healthy people are generally happy. They have done their daily work. They are interested in people and things. They look good. They have energy reserves and do not bother them soon. They have new ideas in mind that they are successful and successful in life....

  • Healthy Lifestyle

History And Nature Of Lumpy Skin Disease

Condition the lumpy skin condition psychoactive drug was 1st seen in northern Rhodesia at the 1929. Among the beginning the cases might be believed to be the assumed of either poisoning or due to a hypersensitivity to the different types of insect bites. Many psychoactive...

Back Pain: Understanding the Causes, Diagnosis, and Management Strategies

Introduction Back pain is a prevalent health issue that affects a significant portion of the population, leading to discomfort and functional limitations. This essay aims to explore the causes of back pain, the process of diagnosing the condition, and various management strategies to alleviate its...

Managing Mental Health Discussion Questions

Happiness test question 1. Indicate your happiness test results? According to my report I am the type of person who believes in the goodness of humankind. I give nearly everyone the benefit of the doubt(at least until proven wrong), and will often accept what people...

Modafinil As A Pharmaceutical Treatment Of Alcohol Addiction

Modafinil (2-[(diphenylmethyl) sulfinyl] acetamide) is becoming more and more well known as a cognitive enhancer though it is in fact licensed as a drug to treat certain sleep disorders such as narcolepsy. Modafinil has been shown to have beneficial effects on memory, learning and attention...

  • Alcohol Abuse

Overview Of Anaplasmosis In Humans And Animals

Human behaviors such as migratory settlement, urbanization, movement across areas and travel have the ability to potentiate the exposure of new host reservoirs. Of highest importance is the rate and intensity of physical nearness between humans and animals. For instance, the Kenyan semi-arid and arid...

Overview Of Pelvic Inflammatory Disease

In the Unified States about 1 million ladies have PID every year. Around 1 out of 8 sexually dynamic young ladies will have PID before age 20. Pelvic fiery ailment (PID) is a contamination of the female conceptive organs. It's more often than not happens...

Overview Of The Rotavirus Disease

The Pathogenic Organism Viruses are small, tremendously small in comparison to cells. In fact, if your where to magnify a cell to the size of a basketball a virus would still only be about the size of the tip of a pen. Virus are unable...

Poland Syndrome: Alteration In The Chest

Find out what this anomaly is and what is your solution There are defects in the chest that are far from tuberous breasts, this is one of those cases. The Poland Syndrome is a non-hereditary congenital malformation that consists in the total or partial absence...

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Home — Essay Samples — Nursing & Health — Infectious Diseases — Infectious Disease

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Essay Examples on Infectious Disease

Writing an essay on this topic can help you understand how they spread, how to prevent them, and their impact on society. It's a great way to explore a current and relevant issue that affects the health and well-being of people around the world.

When choosing a topic for your infectious disease essay, consider the current events, public health concerns, and areas of interest within the field. You can write an argumentative essay discussing the impact of infectious diseases on global health, a cause and effect essay exploring the factors contributing to the spread of diseases, an opinion essay on the effectiveness of vaccination programs, or an informative essay on specific infectious diseases and their symptoms, treatments, and prevention methods.

For example, you can write an argumentative essay on the importance of vaccination in preventing the spread of infectious diseases. You can also explore the causes and effects of antibiotic resistance in infectious diseases, discuss the ethical implications of infectious disease research, or analyze the impact of infectious diseases on the economy and healthcare systems.

To give you an idea of how to structure your essay, here are some thesis statement examples for infectious disease topics: "The role of public health policies in preventing the spread of infectious diseases," "The impact of climate change on the spread of vector-borne diseases," "The ethical implications of infectious disease research on human subjects," "The relationship between antibiotic use in food production and antibiotic resistance in infectious diseases," and "The effectiveness of vaccination programs in controlling the spread of infectious diseases."

When writing the to your essay, you can start with a brief overview of the topic, provide background information on infectious diseases, and introduce your thesis statement. For example, you can introduce the topic of antibiotic resistance and its impact on the treatment of infectious diseases, outline the key points you will discuss in your essay, and present your argument on the importance of addressing antibiotic resistance to prevent the spread of infectious diseases.

In the of your essay, you can summarize the main points you have discussed, restate your thesis statement, and provide some final thoughts on the topic. For example, you can emphasize the need for continued research and public health efforts to address the challenges posed by infectious diseases, highlight the importance of vaccination and antibiotic stewardship in preventing the spread of infections, and call for collective action to combat the global threat of infectious diseases.

The Effectiveness of Vacciness in Preventing Illnesses and Infectious Diseases

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Essay on Lifestyle Diseases

Students are often asked to write an essay on Lifestyle Diseases in their schools and colleges. And if you’re also looking for the same, we have created 100-word, 250-word, and 500-word essays on the topic.

Let’s take a look…

100 Words Essay on Lifestyle Diseases

Introduction to lifestyle diseases.

Lifestyle diseases are sicknesses we get from the way we live. These include heart disease, stroke, obesity, and type 2 diabetes. They happen due to our daily habits like what we eat, how much we move, and whether we smoke or drink alcohol.

Lifestyle diseases are often caused by our choices. Eating too much junk food, not exercising, smoking, and drinking alcohol can lead to these diseases. They can also be caused by stress and not getting enough sleep.

Lifestyle diseases can make us very sick. They can cause pain, make it hard to move around, and even shorten our lives. They also cost a lot of money to treat, which can be hard on families.

The good news is that lifestyle diseases can be prevented. Eating healthy food, exercising regularly, not smoking, and limiting alcohol can help. Getting enough sleep and managing stress are also important.

250 Words Essay on Lifestyle Diseases

What are lifestyle diseases.

Lifestyle diseases are health problems that we get because of the way we live. They are different from other diseases because they are caused by our daily habits. These habits can include eating too much junk food, not exercising enough, smoking, and drinking alcohol. Examples of lifestyle diseases are heart disease, stroke, obesity, and type 2 diabetes.

The Main Causes

The main causes of lifestyle diseases are poor diet, lack of physical activity, and harmful habits. When we eat too much junk food, our bodies do not get the right nutrients. This can lead to obesity, which is a big risk factor for many other diseases. Not exercising enough can also cause health problems. It can make our hearts and muscles weak. Harmful habits like smoking and drinking can damage our bodies in many ways. They can harm our lungs, liver, and other organs.

Prevention of Lifestyle Diseases

The good news is that lifestyle diseases can be prevented. We can do this by making healthy choices. Eating a balanced diet can give our bodies the right nutrients. Regular exercise can keep our hearts and muscles strong. Quitting smoking and limiting alcohol can protect our organs. It is important to start these healthy habits as early as possible to prevent lifestyle diseases.

The Role of Education

Education plays a key role in preventing lifestyle diseases. Schools can teach students about the dangers of poor diet, lack of exercise, and harmful habits. They can also teach students how to make healthy choices. This knowledge can help students avoid lifestyle diseases in the future.

In conclusion, lifestyle diseases are a big problem that can be prevented. We need to make healthy choices and educate ourselves about the dangers of our bad habits.

500 Words Essay on Lifestyle Diseases

Causes of lifestyle diseases.

Lifestyle diseases are mainly caused by the way we live and behave every day. Eating junk food, not exercising, smoking, and drinking alcohol can lead to these diseases. Stress is another big reason for lifestyle diseases. When we are stressed, our body produces a hormone called cortisol. Too much cortisol can lead to health problems like heart disease and diabetes.

Common Lifestyle Diseases

There are many types of lifestyle diseases. Heart disease is one of the most common. It happens when the blood vessels that carry blood to the heart become narrow. This can lead to heart attacks.

Obesity is also a lifestyle disease. It happens when we eat more calories than our body can use. The extra calories are stored as fat.

The good news is that we can prevent lifestyle diseases. Eating healthy food, exercising regularly, not smoking, and limiting alcohol can help. We should also try to reduce stress. This can be done by doing things we enjoy, spending time with friends and family, or practicing relaxation techniques like yoga or meditation.

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Infectious vs. Lifestyle Diseases

Introduction, infectious illnesses, lifestyle illnesses, prevention measures.

Most people know that specific factors may significantly increase or decrease the risk of various illnesses. At the same time, not everyone considers that health conditions can be divided into infectious and non-infectious, and these two groups, in some cases, require varied prevention measures. In order to be mentally and physically healthy, it is vital to know how both types of conditions can be caused and what to do to avoid developing infectious and lifestyle diseases.

In the beginning, it is essential to explore the first group of health states. According to researchers, “infectious diseases are caused by pathogenic micro-organisms such as bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites” (ChildFund Australia, 2020, para. 2). Such conditions are transmitted from one individual to another because the listed micro-organisms are contagious. In general, infectious diseases develop suddenly and have an acute form, but it is possible to resolve them in less than a year. The recent COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated how infection conditions work and can affect numerous people once an individual becomes infected (ChildFund Australia, 2020). Other examples of infections are chickenpox, measles, and influenza; bacteria can cause conditions like tuberculosis, leprosy, syphilis, and others. Treatment options vary depending on the cause; thus, bacterial infections are treated primarily with antibiotics, and antifungals work for fungal infections. Additionally, appropriate lifestyle changes can also contribute to the treatment of such health conditions.

Further, this group includes conditions that are not transmitted from one person to another but developed due to other factors. As stated by Marks (2021), “lifestyle diseases include atherosclerosis, heart disease, and stroke; obesity and type 2 diabetes; and diseases associated with smoking and alcohol and drug abuse” (para. 1). In other words, these conditions are associated with how a person lives and whether they take care about their physical and mental state; if they do not, such illnesses can develop. Therefore, healthy habits and routines can help one avoid lifestyle diseases. However, if a person smokes, uses drugs, drinks alcohol, and engages in other harmful activities, the body suffers. Unhealthy habits can increase the risk of different mental conditions, including depression and anxiety.

The two identified types of diseases have some different and similar prevention measures. Thus, the key approach to avoid spreading infectious conditions is mass vaccination (“Lifestyle-Related Diseases: Lifestyle as Medicine,” n.d.). If people are vaccinated, they can either avoid the virus or have a mild case. Further, infectious and lifestyle illnesses can be prevented by increasing the population’s health literacy. Persons should be aware of the primary factors that cause each type and do their best to decrease the risks. Research also shows that healthy habits, such as smoking cessation, regular exercising, healthy dieting, intake of vitamins, and other routine elements, lead to the prevention of both types of conditions. Persons with robust immune systems can get mild forms of infectious diseases or avoid them. Additionally, all the listed factors reduce the risks of obesity, strokes, and other lifestyle conditions.

To conclude, one may say that it is essential to know the difference between infectious and non-infectious illnesses in order to treat and prevent them correctly. For example, when one knows that their friend or relative is currently sick, personal contact needs to be reduced if the disease is contagious. However, if it is a lifestyle condition, then there is no need to avoid communication. While some prevention factors, including healthy dieting, match, others are different for the two groups.

ChildFund Australia. (2020). What is the difference between an infectious and non-infectious disease?  Web.

Lifestyle-related diseases: Lifestyle as medicine . (n.d.). TNO. Web.

Marks, J. W. (2021). Medical definition of lifestyle disease . MedicineNet. Web.

What Chronic Illness Taught Me About Life

This essay was originally published in the Johns Hopkins News-Letter on August 26, 2020.

Life has a funny way of teaching you a lesson sometimes.

When I was little, I was solely focused on being the best: the best student, the best friend, the best daughter, the best everything. I would do whatever it took to meet that goal. Sleepless nights, high levels of stress and infinite hours of overcommitment became my life.

I did reach those goals though. I was at the top of my graduating class, I had a great group of friends (whom I still talk to today), I was on as many club executive boards as possible, and I got into Hopkins. In my eyes, I was successful, and I wanted to keep it that way. And so, I did.

Within my first year at Hopkins, I already had my sights set on grad school, on a PhD, on a big salary with multiple zeroes in it. I dreamt of being well known for my research — of doing something incredibly groundbreaking. So I applied the same formula that got me into Hopkins: work hard, no matter the cost.

Then, in August of last year, on the very first day of my junior year, the first of a series of 104 degree fevers that would last until the end of November hit. I would wake up in a cold sweat, with rashes and swelling, every morning. Still I tried my best to go to class, attend research and produce results at work. The Baltimore cold did not help, and I felt like a bad student and research assistant, calling out sick from commitments every week. There were days I could not get out of bed due to joint pain, lightheadedness or just plain hopelessness at what had become my “new normal.”

After multiple hospital visits that ended with 80 pages worth of negative test results and no diagnosis, I thought myself a lost cause and a burden to my roommates. They would take care of me, wipe my tears away and on the worst days, make me breakfast and feed it to me. I was worrying everyone I cared about, and the guilt I felt ate at me. I kept thinking this nightmare was just never going to end.

When I traveled home to Miami for Thanksgiving break, my parents took me to the Nicklaus Children’s Hospital, where I would stay for three weeks. The doctors there literally saved my life. I was diagnosed with lupus nephritis, an autoimmune disease with no known cure that attacks the kidneys, among other organs.

At first, I was furious. I would look back, thinking if my first doctors hadn’t been so careless, maybe my lupus would not have affected my kidneys. I thought I would never go back to my normal life, that others would always see me as “sick” or “helpless.” I saw chronic illness as an obstacle, blocking me from my goals, from my success.

It took being sick to realize that the stress and pressure that I was putting on myself was essentially killing me. With my diagnosis, I realized the value of self-care. I finally understood what one of my closest friends means when she says, “Thoughts become words, words become actions.” My internal conversation was toxic, constantly putting myself down when I didn’t complete a task to perfection. I needed to reintroduce myself to me, to be gentle with my body while it recovers from months of physical trauma.

Prior to my diagnosis, my definition of success was always a destination, far into my future that I inched closer to with every effort I made. But I was wrong: Success is not in a place, out of reach and far from today. Success is in the every day. It’s in getting out of bed, in making my friends smile, in being patient with myself and my body. I feel successful when I make myself breakfast, when I meditate, when I express gratitude, when I sing off-key to my roommates’ pets, when I call my parents, when I help someone else and when I ask for help.

I don’t take care of myself because I have lupus. I take care of myself because I am human, and I deserve to rest. I still have big dreams of going to grad school and making an impact, but I now know that I can’t do that unless I take care of myself first. To reach my goals, I need to work hard, but I also need to prioritize my health, because if I don’t, who will?

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Living with Chronic Disease: Problems and Recommendations Essay

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There are many chronic diseases that affect the human body in different ways. These may be unremarkable symptoms that do not greatly interfere with a person’s life. However, the disease can have a pronounced pathogenesis that interrupts an individual’s everyday lifestyle. It may include severe pain, inability to walk, hypersensitivity, and others. In any case, chronic illness has a significant impact on a person’s mental state. It is characterized by mood swings, apathy, depression, and in some cases, suicidal thoughts. The reason for this is the fact of the irreversibility of having a chronic disease and the understanding that it will follow the individual for life. However, in some cases, when accepting a chronic disease, a person develops positive psychological qualities in oneself. The aim is to consider aspects of living with a constant disease using chronic fibromyalgia as an example.

For more effective analysis of the chosen topic, it is first necessary to consider the concept of chronic illness. Such a disease is considered to be one that lasts a lifetime or a long time, and the symptoms can both intensify and subside over time (Bonino, 2020). In the case of effective treatment, symptoms can significantly weaken or disappear altogether, the person will stop noticing them and return to normal life. However, it is worth mentioning that chronic diseases do not go away completely, in some cases, one can only remove the symptoms. In addition, chronic illness is accompanied by periods of remission and exacerbations, compensations and decompensations (Bonino, 2020). Remission is the relief of symptoms and improvement of the condition, in turn, the exacerbation is accompanied by a deterioration in the state. Compensation includes the process of adapting an organism to live with new risk factors, and decompensation is a disruption of work due to exhausted resources.

Fibromyalgia is a chronic disease characterized by muscle pain, stiffness, and discomfort in the tendons and joints. This disease is sometimes referred to as a syndrome as it has many other symptoms, causing discomfort. It may include sleep and gastrointestinal disturbances, anxiety, depression, irritability, and chronic fatigue. In addition, fibromyalgia has a significant impact on the mental state of a person, characterized by negative aspects. It is formulated by the fact that it becomes difficult for an individual to move, and it is impossible, for example, to go in for sports. In turn, it articulates an aspect of inferiority that is difficult to accept and ignore. Fibromyalgia is one of the most common diseases affecting the muscles. However, reliable causes of occurrence are still unknown, despite the prevalence of the disease and technological capabilities.

The most common and distressing symptom for patients is muscle pain. However, an unusual aspect is that the pain in the tissues is not accompanied by an inflammatory process. Thus, hurt does not lead to irreversible consequences and the destruction of this tissue. Moreover, with fibromyalgia, there is no damage to the internal organs, which distinguishes the disease from similar ones. For example, fibromyalgia is very different from other rheumatological diseases, such as polymyositis or rheumatoid arthritis. In these diseases, the main source of pain is the inflammatory process, which as a result, leads to tissue destruction. Moreover, because of these diseases, the destruction of internal organs usually occurs.

The main symptom of fibromyalgia is pain resulting from the hypersensitivity of neurotransmitters in certain areas of the body. It brings considerable discomfort to the patient as normal activities become impossible. In addition, fatigue is often found, which is caused by a violation of the phases of sleep. Thus, usually, a person restores most of one’s strength during the deep phase of sleep. However, in fibromyalgia, the person is unable to enter the deep stage and thus wakes up tired and exhausted. Mental disorders occur in more than half of patients, which include poor recording fixation, impaired fixation memory, and depressed mood. Besides, due to the fact that fibromyalgia is poorly diagnosed, patients are often diagnosed with depression.

After considering the symptoms of an illness, it may seem that living with a chronic illness is either impossible or not everyday life. However, it is necessary to accept the fact of the disease since experiences will not lead to a positive result. One needs to realize that now the pain will follow the person constantly, and other symptoms will have their effect. The best way to deal with depression and anxiety is to work or some action (Bonino, 2020). For example, one can create one’s personal life plan considering the new conditions. It is necessary to analyze the points that have deteriorated and try to turn them into virtues in the aspect of new life. For instance, constant pain can serve as a factor in tempering character and developing willpower. Limited mobility can articulate a chance to try new areas of life, such as writing or being an artist.

Acceptance of the fact of the disease will significantly improve the mental state and reduce depression. It is due to the fact that emotional experiences and resentment do not make sense, however, on the contrary, they worsen the body’s ability to fight the disease. In addition, acceptance allows the individual to think coolly and make an effective plan for coping with illness or improving symptoms (Bonino, 2020). One should remember that any person is susceptible to disease, and many people have much worse conditions. In addition, it should be realized that life is uncontrollable and unpredictable, thus, some things one cannot influence. If the individual were in complete control of life, one would secure an exceptionally positive experience for oneself. However, difficulties are a factor of the movement of life, and challenges help a person to group and act. In addition, it is necessary to expect not only positive but also negative events since both of them can happen anyway.

A significant negative aspect of living with a chronic illness is the limitation of certain bodily functions and the resulting social isolation. In the case of fibromyalgia, due to chronic fatigue and muscle pain, one cannot go for walks or study with others. In this case, it is crucial to maintain communication with friends and people using all possible ways. Fortunately, today, due to the development of technology and the Internet, one has the opportunity to be in constant communication. Moreover, there are many different online communities where a person can find care and support. The individual has the opportunity to make acquaintances and communicate with people who have the same or similar diseases. In this way, people can share their experiences of living with illness, relieving symptoms, and improving mental health. It is important to remember that social isolation will only worsen both mental and physical conditions.

Further, it is crucial to work out one’s own rhythm of life, which will maintain a balance of workload and rest. In other words, it is necessary to do at least some physical activity whenever possible. Despite difficulties accompanying physical activity, it is essential to at least walk once a day. The stroll on air will not only help to avoid muscle atrophy but also increase mental tone (Bonino, 2020). However, one needs to understand the body’s resources and develop one’s own load plan. In some cases, it may be formulated by a walk around the lake, and in others, an exit to the lawn and back. In any occasion, one should listen to one’s own body and consult with a doctor, which will help to choose the optimal rate.

The next important aspect of living with a chronic disease, as already indicated, is performing some activity. However, one doesn’t need to find an offline job since, in this case, fibromyalgia causes difficulty in focusing and problems with attention. Moreover, constant pain and discomfort will prevent one from effectively focusing on the task, leading to aggravated stress. In this regard, the disease opens up opportunities for self-realization, namely, transferring one’s feelings or experiences to other people. It may include writing a book, creating a website or blog, creating a video blog, and others. A sick person’s emotions are genuine, which will be interesting even to people who do not have an illness.

Furthermore, one can create a charitable foundation and raise money to treat or maintain severe symptoms. It may also include a collection of remedies for other, more serious illnesses such as cancer. In case the symptoms improve, one can create an online support group where one can share their trials with people with the same illness. All this formulates the fact of transmitting one’s experiences, which is crucial for the sick person’s mental state. Besides, activity and communication allow one to escape from thoughts about illness and depression. Sometimes, severe stress due to a diagnosis unlocks unexpected talents and skills in a person, such as drawing, writing, or others. Finally, setting goals and achieving them will significantly increase mood, self-esteem, and will.

To conclude, living with a chronic illness means a new stage in life, which for many, formulates a negative experience. However, such an approach will only worsen the body’s mental state and physical capacity. In addition, it will be more difficult for close persons to care for a sick person in case one demonstrates a bad mental state. In the current case, fibromyalgia was considered, which is a chronic disease characterized by muscle pain, sleep disturbances, depression, and chronic fatigue. Aspects of living with this disease include common problems associated with chronic diseases. Similarly, recommendations for leveling problems are similar to other illnesses.

Primarily, one needs to learn to accept the fact of the disease and stop thinking about the causes. It is necessary to consider illness not as a problem but as an opportunity to enter a new life. In some cases, people with chronic diseases realize themselves better than those without them. It is formulated by free time and emotions that a person experiences and stress, which sometimes opens up new talents. There are many ways to perform the activity, such as creating a website, a video blog, writing a book, and others. Finally, working out one’s own exercise plan and listening to the body and doctors are crucial.

Bonino, S. (2020). Coping with chronic illness: Theories, issues and lived experiences . Routledge.

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IvyPanda. (2024, March 19). Living with Chronic Disease: Problems and Recommendations. https://ivypanda.com/essays/living-with-chronic-disease-problems-and-recommendations/

"Living with Chronic Disease: Problems and Recommendations." IvyPanda , 19 Mar. 2024, ivypanda.com/essays/living-with-chronic-disease-problems-and-recommendations/.

IvyPanda . (2024) 'Living with Chronic Disease: Problems and Recommendations'. 19 March.

IvyPanda . 2024. "Living with Chronic Disease: Problems and Recommendations." March 19, 2024. https://ivypanda.com/essays/living-with-chronic-disease-problems-and-recommendations/.

1. IvyPanda . "Living with Chronic Disease: Problems and Recommendations." March 19, 2024. https://ivypanda.com/essays/living-with-chronic-disease-problems-and-recommendations/.

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IvyPanda . "Living with Chronic Disease: Problems and Recommendations." March 19, 2024. https://ivypanda.com/essays/living-with-chronic-disease-problems-and-recommendations/.

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Essay on Cancer for Students and Children

500+ words essay on cancer.

Cancer might just be one of the most feared and dreaded diseases. Globally, cancer is responsible for the death of nearly 9.5 million people in 2018. It is the second leading cause of death as per the world health organization. As per studies, in India, we see 1300 deaths due to cancer every day. These statistics are truly astonishing and scary. In the recent few decades, the number of cancer has been increasingly on the rise. So let us take a look at the meaning, causes, and types of cancer in this essay on cancer.

Cancer comes in many forms and types. Cancer is the collective name given to the disease where certain cells of the person’s body start dividing continuously, refusing to stop. These extra cells form when none are needed and they spread into the surrounding tissues and can even form malignant tumors. Cells may break away from such tumors and go and form tumors in other places of the patient’s body.

essay on cancer

Types of Cancers

As we know, cancer can actually affect any part or organ of the human body. We all have come across various types of cancer – lung, blood, pancreas, stomach, skin, and so many others. Biologically, however, cancer can be divided into five types specifically – carcinoma, sarcoma, melanoma, lymphoma, leukemia.

Among these, carcinomas are the most diagnosed type. These cancers originate in organs or glands such as lungs, stomach, pancreas, breast, etc. Leukemia is the cancer of the blood, and this does not form any tumors. Sarcomas start in the muscles, bones, tissues or other connective tissues of the body. Lymphomas are the cancer of the white blood cells, i.e. the lymphocytes. And finally, melanoma is when cancer arises in the pigment of the skin.

Get the huge list of more than 500 Essay Topics and Ideas

Causes of Cancer

In most cases, we can never attribute the cause of any cancer to one single factor. The main thing that causes cancer is a substance we know as carcinogens. But how these develop or enters a person’s body will depend on many factors. We can divide the main factors into the following types – biological factors, physical factors, and lifestyle-related factors.

Biological factors involve internal factors such as age, gender, genes, hereditary factors, blood type, skin type, etc. Physical factors refer to environmental exposure of any king to say X-rays, gamma rays, etc. Ad finally lifestyle-related factors refer to substances that introduced carcinogens into our body. These include tobacco, UV radiation, alcohol. smoke, etc. Next, in this essay on cancer lets learn about how we can treat cancer.

Treatment of Cancer

Early diagnosis and immediate medical care in cancer are of utmost importance. When diagnosed in the early stages, then the treatment becomes easier and has more chances of success. The three most common treatment plans are either surgery, radiation therapy or chemotherapy.

If there is a benign tumor, then surgery is performed to remove the mass from the body, hence removing cancer from the body. In radiation therapy, we use radiation (rays) to specially target and kill the cancer cells. Chemotherapy is similar, where we inject the patient with drugs that target and kill the cancer cells. All treatment plans, however, have various side-effects. And aftercare is one of the most important aspects of cancer treatment.

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    Essay on Asthma. Essay on Hypersensitivity Pneumonitis. Essay on Typhoid. Essay on Amoebiosis. Essay on Malaria. Essay on Disease # 1. Infectious Diseases. : For most people in the world, the greatest environmental health threat continues to be pathogenic (disease- causing) organisms.

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    The research paper explores the ways in which the quality of life of patients with dementia could be improved. Alzheimer's Disease Through the Lens of a Relationship. In this story, "The Mysteries of My Father's Mind" by Rebecca Rotert, a whole complex of topics is raised related to the experiences of Alzheimer's.

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  6. Essay on Communicable Diseases

    Communicable diseases are illnesses that spread from one person to another or from animals to people. These diseases can travel through the air, by touch, through body fluids, or by bites from insects or animals. Common colds, the flu, and more serious illnesses like tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS are all examples of communicable diseases.

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    Point 4. Finally, describe in your essay on disease the ways of preventing and treating it. Certainly, if you want to amaze your tutor with the essay on disease, this part of the paper should be based on the most up-to-date facts. If you need more ideas for your essay on disease, make use of the following links: essays on alcoholism and an ...

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    If you are looking for an essay topic related to communicable diseases, here are 122 ideas to inspire your writing: The impact of COVID-19 on global health systems. The role of vaccinations in preventing communicable diseases. The ethics of mandatory vaccination policies.

  9. Students' Essays on Infectious Disease Prevention, COVID-19 Published

    As part of the BIO 173: Global Change and Infectious Disease course, Professor Fred Cohan assigns students to write an essay persuading others to prevent future and mitigate present infectious diseases. If students submit their essay to a news outlet—and it's published—Cohan awards them with extra credit.

  10. Infectious and Lifestyle Diseases

    The most common lifestyle diseases include heart disease, diabetes, obesity, hypertension, asthma, and osteoporosis. In general, there are several factors that contribute to the development of these ailments. Smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, poor dietary habits, lack of physical activity, stress, and badly-regulated or insufficient ...

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    Control of Communicable Diseases Essay. Diseases that are spread from one person to another either directly or indirectly are referred to as communicable diseases (Krause, 2008, p. 1). These diseases are caused by germs which are in the form of either bacteria or virus. Therefore, a communicable disease is an illness that arises from ...

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    Essay Samples on Disease. Essay Examples. Essay Topics. Multiple Sclerosis: Chronicle Immune Disease Analysis. Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is an incurable, chronic disease of the immune system and central nervous system that commonly affects the brain, optic nerve, and spinal cord with varying degrees of severity. According to an article by ...

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    Medical students regularly need to complete assignments on various diseases, but the task does not always become easier with time. Creating a college essay about disease requires adequate research skills, critical thinking, analytical skills, and writing competencies.

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    Lifestyle diseases are health problems that we get because of the way we live. They are different from other diseases because they are caused by our daily habits. These habits can include eating too much junk food, not exercising enough, smoking, and drinking alcohol. Examples of lifestyle diseases are heart disease, stroke, obesity, and type 2 ...

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    As stated by Marks (2021), "lifestyle diseases include atherosclerosis, heart disease, and stroke; obesity and type 2 diabetes; and diseases associated with smoking and alcohol and drug abuse" (para. 1). In other words, these conditions are associated with how a person lives and whether they take care about their physical and mental state ...

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    Andréas Astier. Educating in Medicine & Pharmacy. Disease Summaries for Medical Students: A Simple Structure and Approach. Pathophysiology is a full-on and heavy subject to learn in medical school, and with so much going on during the clinical years, it is essential to create a streamlined and efficient way to describe diseases/conditions.

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  19. What Chronic Illness Taught Me About Life

    I saw chronic illness as an obstacle, blocking me from my goals, from my success. It took being sick to realize that the stress and pressure that I was putting on myself was essentially killing me. With my diagnosis, I realized the value of self-care. I finally understood what one of my closest friends means when she says, "Thoughts become ...

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    However, in some cases, when accepting a chronic disease, a person develops positive psychological qualities in oneself. The aim is to consider aspects of living with a constant disease using chronic fibromyalgia as an example. Get a custom essay on Living with Chronic Disease: Problems and Recommendations. 185 writers online.

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  22. Essay on Cancer for Students and Children

    500+ Words Essay on Cancer. Cancer might just be one of the most feared and dreaded diseases. Globally, cancer is responsible for the death of nearly 9.5 million people in 2018. It is the second leading cause of death as per the world health organization.

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    As more writers look to incorporate infectious diseases into their work, there are quite a few things writers should keep in mind: 1. Don't anthropomorphize. Really easy to do, but scientifically wrong. Viruses don't want to kill you; bacteria don't want to infect you; parasites don't want to make your blood curdle.