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Infectious Disease
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Infectious disease is a core subject in health sciences, public health, and biomedical education, examined in courses ranging from epidemiology and microbiology to clinical medicine and global health policy. The field covers illnesses caused by pathogens — bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites — and how they spread, harm, and are treated within human populations. What makes it academically compelling is the intersection of biology, social determinants, and policy: understanding how infections emerge, persist, and are controlled requires analysis at multiple levels, from the cellular to the global. Specific conditions such as AIDS and HIV, Staphylococcus aureus infections, Tularemia, Hantavirus, and emerging infectious diseases represent the kind of focused case material students regularly engage with.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Many adopt a case-study format, profiling a single pathogen or illness — its transmission, characterization, and treatment — while others engage epidemiological frameworks to examine incidence, prevalence, and outbreak patterns. Some papers address emerging and resurging diseases, tracking how new threats develop or how previously controlled infections return. Others explore treatment and immunological responses, including how T cell responses function against infection, while a smaller set situates infectious disease within broader medical concepts or global health contexts.

A strong essay on infectious disease begins with a clearly scoped thesis — focusing on a specific pathogen, population, or policy question rather than the subject as a whole. Evidence drawn from clinical case data, epidemiological statistics, and peer-reviewed research carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is describing symptoms and biology without connecting findings to a meaningful analytical argument about causation, treatment outcomes, or public health significance.

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Paper Undergraduate
Lending Institutions Health Care and Human Capital
This paper discusses human capital, gender disparities and health status considering the impact it has on economic development. In the discussions, the role health plays in development is presented. Further discussions in the paper consider the contribution IMF and World bank makes to the social, economic and political development of a country.
Research Paper Doctorate
NAFTA Historical Beginning of NAFTA (With Specific
Years of NAFTA (NAFTA not enough, other plus and minuses)..
Paper Doctorate
Spanish Influenza Epidemic of 1918 and Two Identifications
Spanish influenza epidemic of 1918 was truly a world-shaking event. The numbers of dead are estimated to be somewhere between 50 and 100 million people, and it is estimated that the numbers of those who were infected…
Paper Undergraduate
Pandemic outbreaks as organizational risks in aviation: exposure factors and transmission
air traffic has continued to increase and it now constitutes a considerable proportion of the travelling public. The amount of long-hour flights has increased significantly. Based on the International Civil Aviation…
Thesis Undergraduate
Jomini's Principles of War Applied to Napoleon's 1813 Campaign
The objective of this study is to use the Campaign of 1813 culminating in the battle of Leipzig and to identify and analyze both the critical points and decisive points that Antoine-Henri Jomini in his ‘Principles of War' would have listed in relation to proper time and sufficient force and identify how many would be applied both positively and negatively to Napoleon's maneuvering and engaging.
Essay Doctorate
Substance Abuse Treatment Analysis of David Ruffin
Most people today probably recognize his signing voice from his hits such as "My Girl," but few may remember David Ruffin of The Temptations music group from the latter half of the 20th century. Like many of his contemporaries, Ruffin fell victim to the ravages of drug abuse during the height of his career, leaving his millions of fans with a musical void in their lives. To gain some further insights into his untimely death from an overdose of cocaine, this paper provides a review of the relevant peer-reviewed and scholarly literature to develop a background and an overview of Ruffin, his use of drugs, and an appropriate screening instrument that could be used to evaluate a similar client's stage of dependence, change or recovery. An application of this diagnostic tool to Ruffin's unique circumstances is followed by a discussion concerning possible placement options and treatment modalities for clients with Ruffin's diagnosis, and the rationale in support of their choice based upon a personal conceptualization and etiology of addiction. Finally, a summary of the research and important findings are presented in the conclusion.
Research Paper Doctorate
infectious disease salmonellosis
Salmonellosis, named after pathologist Daniel S. Salmon who first isolated the organism from porcine intestine, was first described in 1880 and cultured in 1884 (Salmonellosis1 pp).
Essay High School
Poverty and Environmental Issue
In what has been termed a "silent emergency,' hundreds of millions of women and children are especially vulnerable to the ongoing access to clean water. To gain some fresh insights into the current situation with respect to access to clean water for the world's growing population, this essay reviews the relevant literature to determine where the need is most pronounced and what steps are being taken to address this issue in recent years. A discussion concerning these steps and their implications for the future is followed by a summary of the research and important findings in the conclusion.
Thesis Doctorate
Elderly Population With Diabetes
Epidemiology is the study of the distribution and factors to health conditions in particular populations and its application to the control of these health conditions (NCCDPHP, 2004).
Research Paper Undergraduate
Book Review: America's Forgotten Pandemic by Alfred Crosby
Alfred Crosby's work "America's Forgotten Pandemic: The Influenza of 1918" is considered the definitive work on the Spanish influenza that spread worldwide in between August 1918 and March 1919.