YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Article Reviews on Breast Cancer
Essays 1171 - 1200
In six pages this paper discusses prostate cancer in an overview of its epidemiology, diagnosis, and treatment options. Seven sou...
In ten pages this paper argues in favor of a medical need for marijuana to be legally used citing the similar character properties...
In The Closing of the American Mind, Allan Bloom decries the lapse of teaching of traditional American values in American universi...
In eleven pages the issue of whether or not electromagnetic waves can cause cancer is examined with an acknowledgement that while ...
In nine pages this paper compares the incidence rates between Caucasian and African American men regarding prostate cancer. Five ...
has steadily correlated with the increasing incidence of lung cancer. Back at the turn of the century, when cigarette smoking was...
This paper consists of five pages and examines the devastating disease pancreatic cancer, of which much is still unknown. Seven s...
Mesothelioma affects mainly the men who worked in construction trades including shipbuilding, where asbestos was most often used. ...
it may be used to reduce tumors ("What is Chemotherapy"). The chemotherapy drugs used in this way destroy the cancer cells "by st...
This paper describes a capstone project that focuses on the connections between nutrition and cancer. The project will also explor...
This paper offers a meal plant designed to address the needs of a cancer patient. Three pages in length, six sources are cited. ...
This research paper/essay offers a discussion of the importance of nutrition and its effects on cancer survivors. Three pages in l...
that is, whether it will spread (metastasize) and what symptoms that it is likely to cause (Cancer diagnosis, 2005). The term "sec...
with hypochondria is that if someone really has an illness, they will think it is all in their heads. In any event, things were mi...
of sorts. The problem with hypochondria is that if someone really has an illness, they will think it is all in their heads. In any...
application of diagnostic tests or procedures to asymptomatic people for the benefit of dividing them into two groups: those who h...
et. al. (2000), for example, reemphasizes the importance of links made in the 1970s between male infertility and exposure to pesti...
suggests that there is a level of stigmatization and fear that is prevalent in minority communities that reduces the chances that ...
to the health care system, or that everyone should be screened just in case, but rather, that the testing can be uncomfortable, an...
cancer being observed (Wynder, Goodman and Hoffman, 1985). They also suggest that schools should place "major emphasis" on program...
nurses as they engage in diagnostic, prescriptive, and regulatory operations of nursing" (Horan, Doran and Timmins, 2004, p. 30). ...
surface of the cervix to obtain a sample of cells from it (Bissinger, 2002). The examiner then transfers the collected cell...
also a former student of Vivians is now in the rather awkward position of also being one of her doctors, as he is an intern and re...
concerning their death. In the case of individuals diagnosed with cancer who have gone through all the treatments possible and kno...
1). Further, inadequate utilization of screening tests contribute to approximately half of the deaths resulting from cancer of th...
of UV radiation than where the ozone layer is intact. Even where there are no particular problems with overhead ozone, peop...
treatments in a modern, caring and supportive environment" This lays down the aim of the company, to set up a facility which will...
to break. To bring the point home, half a million people die each year from cigarette-related causes (Whelan, 1994, p. 77), with ...
the gastrointestinal system. Patients with no metastasis are more readily afforded the standard five-year survival rate compared ...
young girls to become promiscuous (Gulli, 2006). These groups emphasize that abstinence is the best protection against sexually tr...