...Ensayo de: “5 Cosas que Debes Saber Sobre el Virus de Zika” Este artículo es sobre factos esenciales sobre el virus de Zika. Cubre un nuevo virus que aparezco en Brasil. Aunque no está usualmente fatal, su potencial de ser un grande problema todos es lo suficientemente grande que personas necesita estar consciente de lo. En Latinoamérica, existe en Brasil, pero también se localiza en Hawai, África, el Caribe, Asia y las islas del pacífico. Noticias del virus realmente empezaron a aparecer cuando un bebé en Hawai era infectado. El artículo actual paso en CNN en miércoles, 20 de enero de 2016. Este artículo carga mucha importancia porque el Virus causa problemas para los recién nacidos. El virus de Zika no es contagioso, pero puede ser pasado de una mujer embarazada a su bebé (como un fetus), contacto sexual y de transfusión de sangre. Los mosquitos se cargan lo y, si contrates lo, no hay una cura. Explica que, como la mayoría de viruses, el descanso y muchos líquidos ayuda. También dice que debería “desaparecer en no más de un semana” y “medicamentos antinflamatorios no esteroides deben ser evitados”. Síntomas incluye a fiebre, dolor muscular, conjuntivitis y más. Con que está en las noticias, El Virus de Zika tenga la potencial de estar una grande problema para todos. El virus puede relacionar a las clases de ciencias biomédicas en McKenzie porque allí es donde puedes encontrar los únicos clases donde puedes aprender cómo tratar viruses, cómo funcionan...
Words: 256 - Pages: 2
...10, 2016 Zika Virus “Zika virus was first isolated in 1947, a rhesus monkey in the forest Zika, located in Uganda.” Researchers there found that it lived in mosquitoes, and they learned through experimentation that it could also infect mice” (PhD Jennifer, 2016) For a long time, Zika virus disease was confined to the equatorial regions of Asia and Africa” (Virus D. a., 2016); “The Zika virus is an endemic microorganism in Africa and Asia; it is related to a group of viruses named flaviviruses and is connected to the dengue virus” (Virus T. Z., 2016) However, during the post-2005 period, Zika virus disease began to spread to other parts of the world too. The appearance in South America has been linked to an increased incidence of microcephaly (small head and brain practice) among newborns (causation has not been established yet). “Recent studies have pointed to the fact that the Zika virus has the potential to be extended to those regions of the United States, where more than 60% of the population (200 million) reside” (Virus D. a., 2016). As malaria and dengue fever are believed to Zika virus to spread by mosquitoes bite; Aedes aegypti is considered to be the culprit. This species of mosquito is the same that is involved in the spread of diseases of dengue and chikungunya. Some Ideas: * Where Zika virus is present? * What are the symptoms of the disease virus Zika? * How you can diagnose Zika? * What is the difference between the Zika, dengue and...
Words: 1220 - Pages: 5
...dangerous and in some cases can even be lethal. This essay will be focusing on two different viruses (Zika Virus and Lassa Virus), and will prove that an outbreak of Zika Virus would be more dangerous to public health in Queensland than an outbreak of Lassa Virus. This will be discussed through four different criteria: the mode of transmission, the treatment, symptoms and the mortality rate. TRANSMISSION: One way to reveal whether an outbreak of a specific virus would be dangerous to public health, would be to understand how that virus is transmitted from one person to another. Zika virus is mainly transmitted by the Aedes mosquitos....
Words: 1482 - Pages: 6
...of the speaker. Logos is the use of logical patterns to persuade the audience. Finally, pathos is the emotional component of any influencing process. All these three fundamental elements play a huge role in any attempt at convincing whether in a speech or a text. When the author works all of them properly, then the audience is more likely to be persuaded. It is not necessary, however, to use all of them because there are a lot of components in each one of the three rhetorical appeals. Nevertheless, some elements of each should usually be in the work to make it persuasive. Thus, an essay that relies primarily on one of the rhetorical appeals, with little use of the others, has a small chance to persuade the audience to accept the writer’s position. In “The Zika Virus and Brazilian Women’s Right to Choose” editorialist Debora Diniz successfully explains the connection between the nature of the Zika Virus in Brazil and the violation of Brazilian women’s rights because of her competent applying of rhetorical appeals like ethos, logos, and pathos. Nevertheless, Diniz implies some of the appeals more effectively than the others. For example, her ethos is strong and appropriate as she establishes credibility in the issue by providing her knowledge and developing the persona. Her extrinsic ethos is strong because she has good sense, moral character, appropriate knowledge and authority to speak about the subject matter. Diniz effectively uses different facts from her biography and her heritage...
Words: 1515 - Pages: 7
...Birth Defects Synthesis Essay As excitement and joy flow through expecting parents, troubling thoughts will occur when preparing for an unborn child. With numerous thoughts arising for the family one specific thought, will this child be healthy, will present itself throughout the pregnancy and at birth. Birth defects change the lives of families and unborn children every day. On the website, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in the United States alone one out of thirty-three children display having a birth defect before and at delivery (“Facts about Birth Defects” par. 1). By knowing the impact birth defects have on society cause a worry for mothers-to-be and families wanting a child of their own. Some families will search for ways...
Words: 1685 - Pages: 7
...the area of professional nursing that upholds the elite verbal and written communication standards practiced in nursing today. The Communications and the Language of Nursing The language spoken in the profession of nursing requires a wide spectrum of core communication skills that provide a verbal bridge of common understanding of illness, healing, wellness or prevention. These skills require the continual change and transformation of the nursing profession’s language. From the perspective of the patient’s bedside and nurse-to-nurse communications, through the nurse to the specialist, the criteria for common core can be acknowledged. Additionally, the personal slang and reflections of self identification shared in Anzaldua and hooks’ essays demonstrates the immediate need for the requirement of a common core language required to maintain and protect the elite standard of care expected in the medical profession, as a basic minimum to keep the focus on the patient’s care and medical wellbeing. Metamorphosis of the Professional Identity of Nursing The nursing profession is “enveloped in metamorphosing their professional identity” (Allan, Chapman, O'Connor, & Francis, 2007, p. 47-51). The nursing...
Words: 1581 - Pages: 7