Results for Cholera
- Chronicle of a Death Foretold -
... essential and most prominent theme of love as a literal plague, culminates in the book's final chapter in which Florentino Ariza orders the Captain to announce, falsely, that there is at least one passenger aboard the shi... - Cholera -
...ude sudden onset of up to one liter (quart) per hour of a fishy smelling diarrhea. Dehydration occurs rapidly, which causes rapid pulse (heart rate). The skin becomes very dry. Mucus membranes become dry as well as in the ... - cholera -
...essential to human survival, the result can be disastrous at times when human water resources are contaminated through unsanitary conditions. . Food as well becomes infected, by being washed by the contaminated water (raw ... - Edward R. Tufte -
...lace data in an appropriate context for assessing cause and effect (Tufte, 1990, p. 141). Tufte describes how the original data listed the victim’s names and described their circumstances, all in order by date of death. Tu... - love vs. cholera -
...society has become increasingly desensitized. An omniscient narration is quite predominant in the story One Hundred Years of Solitude. He writes as if the story of Macondo is summed up into one journalistic report withou... - Beach Pollution -
... about three days. Most people wouldn’t want to wait that long just to go swimming.
Pathogens, disease-causing organisms, may be present at the pollutant’s entrance. Gastroenteritis is one of the most common illnes... - Bacteria -
...he smallest fossils-a few hundred millionths of a meter.
A bacterium grows in wide variety of habitats and conditions. Pathogenic bacteria are known for diseases such as cholera, tuberculosis and gonorrhea. They can be ... - Blankets for the Dead -
...s even purchased black slaves. The Cherokee even adopted a constitution based on that of the united states. The Cherokee Phoenix was the first Native American paper in journalism. Even after all their efforts to co-exis... - UNICEF -
...ow that children are suffering from more than just hunger and AIDs. UNICEF has been helping children from all over the world by providing them unconditional love and basic necessities for decades, and, therefore, are wort... - Hawaiians Haoles and Locals -
... “There is nothing Hawaiian left; it is all haole [white] now” (Trask, p7)
The Polynesians, supposedly the first “Hawaiians,” never grasped the concept of wealth. ... Among the many were influenza, measles, whooping... - Robert Frost -
...n Frost was eleven, his father died of tuberculosis. His family then moved back to his father hometown Salem, New Hampshire on a farm. Frost was then home- schooled. He attended high school in the year of 1892. Frost becam... - Marquez's depiction of love as seen in "Love in the Time of Cholera" -
...ated by diarrhea and green vomit, he became disoriented and suffered from sudden fainting spells…his condition did not resemble the turmoil of love so much as the devastation of cholera" (61). Florentino's mother, Transito... - Transmission and prevention of infectious diseases -
...issible diseases. They include air (e.g. influenza, tuberculosis), water or food (e.g. cholera), vector (e.g. dengue fever), body fluids (e.g. AIDs, Hepatitis B).
Preventive measures
For the prevention of infectious di... - The power of knowledge -
...fe are factors essential to progress of technology and science which lead to increasing productivity through new processes, instruments and methods. The continuous and accelerated progress of knowledge has also made it pos... - Louis Pasteur -
...niversity of Strasbourg. Here he met Marie Laurent, daughter of the rector of the university. They were married in 1849. Pasteur's wife shared his love for science. They had five children; three died in childhood.
I... - bhkaE j adglvd -
...an went to Boston and came back with another wife partly because she already had some boys.
When Harriet got older her best friend died.. She wrote to her friend’s husband Calvin Stowe quite often to comfort him a... - Far From The Madding Crowd. -
... moist from her exertions.” He describes her mounting her horse “the glide into this position was that of a kingfisher – its noiselessness that of a hawk.” She is “a fair product of Nature.” Nature is Oak’s main frame of r... - Conditions of traveling to america -
....
he sleeping quarters were cramped and we had to had to do our own cooking in the gallery of the boat. Mother had provided salt beef and other preserved meats and fish, dried vegetables, and red pickled cabbage
To maxim... - Florence Nightingale -
...her ambition, and she encouraged Florence to keep trying. In 1851, Florence’s father gave her permission to train as a nurse.
When Florence was thirty-one years old she went to Kaiserwerth, Germany where she studied to b... - Irish Immigration -
...find, and various diseases reeked havoc on immigrants. Somehow, most people managed to scrape by.
Many of the people who immigrated came desperate for any type of work. For this reason, they were hired to the worst job...