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Asthma
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Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airways characterized by recurring symptoms such as wheezing, breathlessness, and airway obstruction. It attracts substantial academic attention because it sits at the intersection of physiology, epidemiology, and public health policy. Students encounter asthma as a writing subject in nursing programs, health sciences courses, medical anthropology, and epidemiology seminars. Its complexity — involving genetic predisposition, environmental triggers, immune response, and healthcare access — makes it a rich topic for analysis across multiple disciplines. The condition's prevalence, particularly among children, and its unequal distribution across populations give it both clinical and social dimensions worth sustained academic inquiry.

The archived papers approach asthma from a wide range of angles. Epidemiological papers examine how the disease is distributed across populations and what risk factors drive its incidence. Several papers focus specifically on children in the United States and North America, exploring how age and geography shape diagnosis and outcomes. Others take a clinical direction, analyzing bronchial epithelium function, damage, and repair, or using case studies of individual patients to examine treatment and disease management. Nursing-focused essays address patient education and care planning, while pieces on asthma and obesity or the anthropology of asthma bring in broader social and cultural frameworks for understanding the condition.

A strong essay on asthma needs a clearly scoped thesis — broad epidemiological surveys and focused clinical analyses require very different evidence. Physiological arguments carry weight when grounded in specific mechanisms such as airway inflammation or bronchial response, while population-level claims require demographic and outcomes data. A common pitfall is conflating risk factors with causes; precision about the relationship between variables like obesity, environment, and asthma incidence will significantly strengthen any argument.

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Paper Undergraduate
Neuroborreliosis Borrelia Burgdorferi or Bb
Borrelia burgdorferi or Bb is a species of spirochetes or small and round-shaped bacteria, which cause lyme disease in human beings.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Main contributors to childhood obesity in America
Obesity in childhood is a recent problem. Not so long ago, in the '60s and '70s, less than 5% of children were overweight. By the '80s and '90s the percentage had doubled and today it is up to 15%, so three times as…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Ephedrine abuse among athletes
The use of nutritional and dietary supplements continues to be on the rise among the youths of the nation. Herbal dietary supplements such as ephedrine, ginseng, etc., are particularly common among athletes and college…
Thesis Undergraduate
Asthma and Children in the US
The word asthma comes from the Greek word aazein which means to exhale with one's mouth open or to breathe with a pant; in literature its first emergence appears in the Illiad (Benson & Haith, 34). The exact definition of asthma be it with children or adults is that it is "a chronic disease of the lung manifest clinically as episodic obstruction of pulmonary airflow (Benson & Haith, 34). Asthma is an extremely common childhood illness and one which appears to be increasing each year with the number of children who have died from asthma tripling in the last few years (Martin & Fabes, 262).
Paper Masters
Microbial disease etiology and pathogenesis
¶ … disease known as influenza is a respiratory illness and it is caused by flu viruses. Influenza is not to be confused with the common cold. It may originally start out that way, with some cold-like symptoms, but very…
Paper Undergraduate
Wrongful Life / Damages Debate
In the most common type of wrongful life case, a doctor (or geneticist) fails to diagnose a very sever genetic problem in a fetus. In most cases, the problem is so severe that many parents say that, had they known about…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Epidemiology concepts and applications
Low Birth Weight Babies and Asthma in Urban Populations
Paper Undergraduate
Birth Stages in the First
In the first stage, uterine contractions are 15 to 20 minutes apart at the beginning and last up to a minute. These contractions cause the woman's cervix which is the opening into the birth canal to stretch and open.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Dance concepts and cultural significance
Dance Therapy to Help an Autistic Child Communicate
Paper Doctorate
Childhood Obesity Is One of the Most
The problem of childhood obesity has become a crisis in America, as upwards of 17% of children from age 2 to 19 are now obese. The reasons for a child becoming obese are very clear: lack of exercise, eating fatty and high caloric foods from fast food franchises, and not having healthy fresh fruits and vegetables. The physical problems that are associated with childhood obesity are heart ailments and diabetes; and there are psychological problems as well.