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Family History
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Family history as an academic subject appears across multiple disciplines, including family science, nursing, public health, genetics, and business studies. Students engage with it because it sits at the intersection of personal narrative and rigorous inquiry — tracing how biological inheritance, cultural background, and generational patterns shape individual outcomes. The topic is academically rich because it requires connecting lived experience to theoretical frameworks, whether those frameworks concern disease risk, identity development, or the continuity of family-run enterprises across generations.

The archived papers on this topic approach family history from notably varied angles. Some focus on health and clinical contexts, examining how family history informs patient diagnosis, symptom management, and the relationship between genetics and nursing practice. Others take a personal or biographical direction, exploring how family background and self-perceptions develop alongside biographical characteristics that influence productivity. Business-oriented papers examine family enterprises such as real estate operations, tracing management decisions across generations. A smaller set of papers engages with ethical and policy dimensions, including genetic diagnosis and questions of moral responsibility tied to reproduction and inheritance.

A strong essay on family history benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that specifies which dimension of family history is under examination — biological, cultural, economic, or psychological — rather than attempting to cover all of them at once. Evidence drawn from case studies, patient histories, or documented generational patterns tends to carry more weight than broad generalizations. The most common pitfall is treating family history as purely descriptive; the strongest essays use historical and biographical detail to support an analytical argument about how patterns across generations lead to measurable outcomes in health, identity, or institutional development.

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Paper Doctorate
Coronary artery disease case study: 47-year-old male construction worker
Eric is a 47-year-old who has just been diagnosed with Coronary Artery Disease (CAD). He works in the construction industry and spends most of his time away from his family i.e. wife and three children.
Research Paper Doctorate
Impact of MRSA in X-ray departments
As the mean age of the general population increases, and as we stand on the threshold of the senility of the baby boomers, geriatric health care is becoming a more significant issue.
Paper Undergraduate
Immigration patterns and policy analysis
"Hey, Kim, do you want to throw around the pigskin?" I stared blankly at the American boy in front of me, who was easily throwing the oblong ball up and down and catching it in his hands.
Research Paper Doctorate
Migraines and strokes: cardiovascular and neurological associations
Migraine and strokes: correlations among women
Essay Doctorate
Neural Correlates of Drug Relapse Propensity Refraining
The relapse rate for drug abusers undergoing treatment is very high, around 50 percent, because the contributing factors are so complex that identifying which individuals need more intense intervention has been difficult. Researchers are beginning to identify in what ways brain function differs in drug users, with some success. Geneticists have also identified DNA markers that seem to predict those having a high risk of relapse. This essay will examine the results of recent research efforts in an effort to describe how close scientists are to providing treatment suggestions that could potentially lower relapse rates.
Paper Doctorate
Diabetes Concept Map: Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
There are some pancreatic changes that have been associated with the onset of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, especially the progressive failure of pancreatic beta-cells apparently as a response to insulin resistance and leading to under-production and a loss of pancreatic function (Feinglos & Bethel, 2008; Serrano, 2009). Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus can have a circular effect on the pancreas; though it is typically a structural and/or functional degradation in the pancreas that brings on Type 2 (as well as Type 1) Diabetes Mellitus, the start of the disease can lead to further degradation of pancreatic structure and function in a circular pattern that will increase insulin resistance and reduce insulin production by breaking down the cascading cycle of insulin production and consumption that occurs
Research Paper Doctorate
Childhood depression: causes, symptoms, and treatment approaches
Major depressive disorder, or MDD, may affect up to twenty percent of the adult population. The recognition of depression as a serious and common mental disorder has been vital in the identification and treatment of…
Research Paper Doctorate
How Huntington's Disease Affects Patients and Their Families
¶ … Huntington's disease affects families
Paper Undergraduate
Bipolar disorder: characteristics, symptoms, and treatment approaches
Bipolar disorder has been studied for more than a decade after remaining undiagnosed in children and adolescents for many years. This article will discuss the current available literature on the phenomenon of bipolar disorder and its diagnostic issues with specific focus on psychopharmacological treatments and its management for treating this disorder.
Paper Undergraduate
Letters Evaluating Writing Dear Student
I have read your essay and I am trying my best to find something positive to say about it, but that is difficult. It is obvious to me that English is not your first language because of some of your choices of words, the…