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Search results 1481 - 1490 of 7138 matching essays
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1481: Kawasaki Disease
... signs of the illness disappear and laboratory results return to normal. Another fear of Kawasaki disease is the formation of an aneurysm. These aneurysms are very dangerous and if one is blocked or bursts the child can have a heart attack and potentially die. However the chance of deaths due to Kawasaki disease is between one half and two percent. Kawasaki disease is described as acute childhood vasculitis. Since the cause ... very rare. Even with untreated patients the effects on the circulatory system are present in low numbers. In fact, approximately twenty percent of untreated patients develop weak coronary arteries. It is still suggested that any child suffering from Kawasaki disease should have his circulatory system monitored by his or her primary physician, a cardiologist, and a rheumatologist, if certain symptoms occurred. Other complications of Kawasaki disease are myocarditis, and an increase ... three weeks. Most patients make a full recovery from the disease with no long-term effects. While the disease may move on after three weeks some of the effects it has may stay with the child longer. If arthritis or myocarditis was present in the child then those symptoms could last another six to eight weeks. Coronary artery disease, if present, may persist for the next year, but should get ...
1482: Teaching Respect To Children
... that person. It is extremely easy to sit back and say that parents should teach respect, but it is not as easy to actually teach it. For there is really no way to teach a child to respect others. Parents can tell their children to respect others all they want, but the only way a child will actually learn respect is from observing their parents as well as others showing respect. This is why teaching respect is so difficult, even if a child sees his parents respecting others it may not be enough, the child must see other people respecting others. They must also feel that other people respect them, because if they do not get respect ...
1483: Alcoholism - Pros And Cons
... I placed this statement here, because I personally believe that men, such as myself, should be aware on how alcohol effects a “male’s ability to perform”. Domestic violence is a common consequence of alcohol abuse. For women, the most serious risk factor for injury from domestic violence may be a history of alcohol abuse in her male partner. Alcoholism in parents also increases the risk for violent behavior and abuse toward their children. Children of alcoholics tend to do worse academically than others, have a higher incidence of depression, anxiety, and stress and lower self-esteem than their peers. Children who were diagnosed with ...
1484: Crime And Punishment
... Puni shment, into any of the various parts in the dream. Each part that a character takes on leads to a different conclusion about that character. Raskolnikov himself "fits" into the positions of Mikolka, the child, and the mare. If Mikolka, the drunken owner of the mare, were to represent Raskolnikov, then the mare would most probably represent Alyona Ivanovna. The senseless beating of the mare by Mikolka is similar to ... contemplating. Dostoevsky unveils Raskolnikov's cruel side during this dream, if it is to be interpreted in this way. On the same token, Raskolnikov's compassionate side could be represented by the little boy. The child, watching the beating, realizes the absurdity of it. He even rushes to Mikolka, ready to punish him for killing the mare. This illustrate s Rodion's internal struggle while contemplating the murder of Alyona. His humane side, the child, tells him to live and let live. And his "extraordinary" side, according to his definition, tells him that he should eliminate Alyona altogether, for the good of man kind. On the other side of ...
1485: Planck v. Indiana
... in Anderson, Indiana. The examining doctor, Dr. Joseph Woschitz, came to the conclusion that no treatment was needed for any of the children. How can the state justify this type of behavior? Is ripping a child unwillingly from his mother's arms in the best interest of the public good? What does society have to benefit from this? In short, this does not affect the public good per se, but does ... that says the family has exceeded its rights, or that the state has exceeded theirs? There is no line, and that is why this argument is so difficult. While the state is responsible for a child's health, education and welfare, why do we not see the state swarm into a house with a SWAT team that home-schools their children? If those children do not learn as much as their ... is satisfactory. But in doing so, especially in this case, it is problematic to assume that the Plancks should not be treating their own kids with alternative medicine. Since no parent would want their own child to die, the state has stepped in to serve as the care giver to Lance Planck. But when Mr. and Mrs. Planck decline this care, should the state defy the parent's right to ...
1486: A Farewell To Arms
... fear. He shows courage without second thought when he helps injured men coming from the front. Individual suffering is shown through the eyes of Frederick Henry having to face the death of his wife and child. Physical suffering is obviously shown by the men that get injured in the war. This physical suffering provides the context in which courage can take place. Comradery, surprisingly, doesn't seem to be as obvious ... is what Catherine has a fear of, loosing Frederick Henry to the unpredictability of the war. Another prominent theme is Frederick Henry's personal suffering. This is shown by the death of Catherine and his child. When he meets Catherine he finds a new form of order in his life. When Frederick puts aside his involvement in the war, he realises that Catherine is the order and value in his life ... the realisation that cannot base his life on another person or thing, because, ultimately, they will leave or disappoint him. With the end of their affair when Catherine dies giving birth to their stillborn love child, Frederick experiences suffering as his order and values in his life have been completely shattered. He cannot depend on any one person, such as Catherine, or any thing, such as religion, war, order or ...
1487: Gay Marriage
... upon. However, by preventing two people from marrying each other, rights are taken away. Another strong argument is that the environment created by gay couples is not a good one in which to raise a child. The belief is that a child raised within a homosexual family will turn out differently from one raised within a heterosexual family. These people worry about the well being of the child in terms of sexual identity, personal development, and social relationships. “Studies have revealed normal development of gender identity among children of lesbian and gay parents” (Ward, 1). In the same report, children said that ...
1488: The Grapes of Wrath: Symbolic Characters
... religious meaning is not so much symbolic of a specific person or event in the bible, but more of an example of Christian values. The great hardship in her life was the fact that the child she was pregnant with the whole story, and the one that kept her from doing work necessary to everyone's survival, was stillborn. Now, after going through all this, she had to face the reality of living without her child and the reality of her husband walking out on her. Even after all this when the Joads come upon the old man in the barn "the two women [Ma Joad and Rose of Sharon] looked deep into each other's eyes. Not my will, but Thine be done." (Shockley, 94) Rose knows that even though she had lost her own child, she must now take another, and the fact that Steinbeck has her say "Thine will be done" is because she knows that it is in fact God's will that she is serving, and ...
1489: Internet Firewalls
... the easier by programs which systematically try all character combinations until the correct one is eventually generated. User-IDs and passwords can also be trapped by finding security holes in programs; a person looking to abuse the Internet finds these holes and uses the information leaked through them for his or her own personal agenda. Even someone who has been entrusted with high-level network access, such as a system administrator ... Internet server and anyone intent on invading its sensitive data. Countering the Threat with a Firewall As the name implies, an Internet Firewall is a system set up specifically to shield a Web site from abuse and to provide protection from exposure to inherently insecure services, probes, and attacks from other computers on the network. A Firewall can be thought of as a pair of mechanisms: one, which exists to block ... sensitive data, making it invisible as it moves across the Internet. This technology is also called tunneling because it effectively creates a tunnel through the Internet preventing outsiders from seeing the data. Conclusion: Plan for Abuse Planning for abuse before it can happen is the key to building a secure and successful Internet environment. Filtering and connectivity policies must be defined and must incorporate not only security needs, but also ...
1490: Special Education Students
Special Education Students Since the 1980's more and more school have began to practice the technique of inclusion in their classrooms. Inclusion is a term which expresses commitment to educate each child to the maximum extent appropriate, in the classroom he or she would otherwise attend.( Education Resources. "Special Education Inclusion."www.weac.org/resource/june96/speced.htm. Nov 15, 1998).Most schools began this process by ... students, no matter what their handicap, will be in a "regular"classroom full time.( Education Resources...) The general difference between main streaming and inclusion is that people in favor of main streaming believe that a child with disabilities first belongs in the special education environment and that the child must earn his or her way into the "regular" education environment. Those who support inclusion believe that the child always should begin in the "regular" environment and be removed only when appropriate services cannot ...


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