This is AcaDemon.com

Home Sellers Area Buy Term paper FAQs Custom Term Papers Contact Us Facebook Application Go to AcaDemon UK Go to AcaDemon AU Go to AcaDemon Canada Go to AcaDemon France

Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>

Search results on "MAD COW DISEASE":

Term Paper # 51260 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Mad Cow Disease, 2004.
An analysis of anticipated increases in business stock prices due to impact of mad cow disease on U.S. cattle.
1,816 words (approx. 7.3 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 58.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
The paper intrinsically studies the consequential affect and aftermath of 'mad cow disease', which has led to the introduction of substitutes like pork and other meats in the market. It further studies the changing trends that many of these companies have incorporated in attempt to sustain and raise their profits from these substitutes. It looks at how studies show that integrating certain changes to the companies marketing mechanism and strategies on the eve of 'mad cow disease' have been successful, not only to replenish the sales figures, but also in incurring profits.

From the Paper
"The Other areas where consolidation occurred were the packing and retail industries. In an attempt to regain their market hold various leading food giants are vying to increase their sales and are introducing new trends. The four major companies, which followed the same suit, were Smithfield Foods, IBP, Swift (Conagra) and Excel (Cargill). In 1998, the four-firm concentration level was 56.3% of the packing sector. They contributed to the slaughter of more than half of the nation's hogs. Now Smithfield is the world's largest pork producer and kills an estimated 20% of the United States' hog supply. It considered itself as an integrated food company. Eventually owned the third largest hog producing firm in the US and also had been tightly coordinating with other large producers."
Term Paper # 37489 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Mad Cow Disease and McDonald's, 2002.
A look at the efforts made by McDonald's to educate the public on the dangers of Mad Cow Disease .
1,150 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 44.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper assesses the issue of advertising safety precautions for Mad Cow Disease from the position of a campaign manager for McDonald's customer service division. This paper will take the position that the public would remain loyal to McDonald's after efforts are made to educate them concerning mad cow disease.
Term Paper # 25777 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Mad Cow Disease: Governmental and Media Culpability, 2002.
A discussion of the discovery of mad cow disease, to the present, and the role the media/government has played in control, prevention, and the dissemination of information.
2,000 words (approx. 8.0 pages), 8 sources, MLA, $ 63.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
Examines the treatment of Mad-cow disease in the media, and by the government.
Discusses the following topics
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy and Scrapie
What Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies Do
Two Theories on the Action of Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies
British Government Admits Mad Cow Disease Exists (1987)
Testing Results by the British government MAFF
Culpability of the British Medical Society
The Spread of CJD
Steps Taken by the British Government

From the Paper
"Where the industry has gone wrong is in listening to the PR people. The mad-cow epidemic is not an information management issue...it is a disease that will not go away." These words are from an interview with Dr. Pringle, a member of the Sperling Biomedical Foundation, and the founder of www.mad-cow.org. I believe that they highlight what has been fundamentally wrong about the treatment of mad-cow disease by the British government and the British media. Several grave errors have been made about the treatment of this issue, and they continue to have repercussions today, as we explore America's mad-cow incidents, and rising problems in Europe, Asia, and South America. At the time this paper was written, mad cow disease had been confirmed in domestic cattle in Belgium, France, Ireland, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Switzerland, Spain and Germany."
Term Paper # 53929 temporarily unavailable
Term Paper # 69984 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
U.S. Fast Food and Mad Cow Disease, 2004.
Examines mad cow disease and how fast food companies are responding.
690 words (approx. 2.8 pages), 2 sources, APA, $ 23.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines a 2004 Wall Street Journal article on mad cow disease, and how companies, especially fast food companies, are responding to the possibility of tainted meat. It uses the example of McDonald's.
Term Paper # 96846 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Mad Cow Disease, 2007.
An analysis of the epidemiology, pathophysiology and prevention for Mad Cow Disease (known as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans).
1,445 words (approx. 5.8 pages), 10 sources, MLA, $ 47.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper discusses Mad Cow Disease, otherwise known as Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy or as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans. It discusses the history, background and pathophysiology of the disease. It then goes on to describe prevention and treatment options for the disease, concluding that there are no effective treatments available. The paper concludes by discussing nursing and collaborative care for patients with the disease.

Table of Contents:
Epidemiology
Pathophysiology
Prevention and Treatment
Differences in Classic CJD and Variant CJD
Nursing and Collaborative Care

From the Paper
"Variant CJD has a median age at death of 28 years. The duration of the illness is approximately 13-14 months. Some of the clinical signs and symptoms include: prominent psychiatric/behavioral symptoms, painful dyesthesiasis; and delayed neurologic signs. The "Pulvinar sign" on an MRI is present in greater than 75% of most of the Variant CJD. The presence of "florid plaques" on neuropathology is usually in large numbers and easily detected. The agent is readily detected in the lymphoid tissue. There is a marked accumulation of protease-resistance prion protein noted in the brain. This is why the Variant CJD is much more easily detected because it shows up on more tests."
Term Paper # 67701 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Mad Cow Disease, 2006.
An overview of this brain disease which affects cattle and humans.
857 words (approx. 3.4 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 30.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
Mad Cow Disease is a brain disease of cattle, which was first identified in the United Kingdom in the mid-1980s. Although not as widespread as some other livestock diseases, such as hoof-and mouth-disease, the Mad Cow Disease has attracted a lot of publicity because of its apparent apparent ability to transmit to humans, the fact that there is no known cure for the disease and the horrifying nature of the brain decay it causes. This paper explains the cause of the disease, how it affects the organisms, how it is transmitted from one organism to another, and the ways in which it could be transmitted to humans. The paper also discusses the human equivalents of the disease.

Paper Outline:
Cause of the Disease
How the Disease Affects the Organism
How is the Disease Transmitted from one Organism to Another
The Ways in Which it Could be Transmitted from Cows to Humans
Human Equivalents of the Disease
Works Cited

From the Paper
"This theory about the spread of disease is based on the observation that incidences of the disease have mostly been found in the UK where feeding of meat and bone meal to cattle was most common. Although other European countries also fed meat and bone meals to cattle as a protein supplement, the British laws about high temperature sterilization of the protein meal were relatively lax in order to keep meat prices competitive."
Term Paper # 58328 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Mad Cow Disease, 2005.
An overview of the causes, treatment and prevention of Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE).
1,438 words (approx. 5.8 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 47.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines how Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) is a neuro degenerative disease in a class of diseases known as Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (TSE's). It looks at how BSE is caused by prions, which are related to several other TSE's and how it has been a major concern with the economy and human and animal health worldwide together with political policies. It also explores how testing, diagnosis and prevention of BSE and other TSE's are still under investigation.

From the Paper
"vCJD also affects humans, but differs from CJD. Symptoms include depression, mood swings, anxiety, withdrawal, hallucinations, delusions, parasthesia ("pins and needles"), headaches, cold extremities, lack of coordination, loss of memory, loss of concentration, inability to talk or move, and results in death after 7-24 months, averaging 14 months.(7) It affects people ages 8-14.(7) 156 confirmed or probable cases have been reported worldwide as of April 2004. 146 of these cases were reported in Great Britain, 6 in France, and one in each Italy, Ireland, United States, and Canada. (7)Treatment for this disease includes chlorpromazine and quainacrine, but only experimentally."
Term Paper # 11544 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Mad Cow Disease, 1996.
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy. Causes, symptoms, effects on humans, British govt. & public reaction to outbreak, economics.
1,350 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 7 sources, $ 47.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

From the Paper
"Many people claim that they want less government. In the case of Great Britain's problems with "mad cow disease" this is exactly what they got. Yet few people can be pleased. On March 20, 1996, the United Kingdom Health Minister announced that ten relatively young people had died of a very rare brain disease, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), that generally attacks only a very few elderly people. The minister reported that "the most likely explanation at present is that these cases are linked to exposure to bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) or mad cow disease (Bonte-Friedheim A10). This is tragic and alarming but it is also outrageous. BSE has been a serious problem for Britain for a long time yet "for a decade [the Conservative government] has dismissed concerns raised by some scientists that humans could contract the disease by eating the meat of diseased..."
Term Paper # 68037 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Prion Disease in Humans, 2005.
An overview of Mad Cow Disease and how it has benefited the medical world.
1,636 words (approx. 6.5 pages), 5 sources, APA, $ 53.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
Ever since Mad Cow Disease sparked terror in international headlines, the public has been concerned about eating beef. Mad Cow Disease is not, however, the first or only prion-caused disease. Several others, including Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD) and kuru in humans and a host of agricultural animal disorders join Mad Cow in both cause and effects, the major effect being horror. This paper argues that, while the presence on the planet of a disease that literally lays waste to human brain tissue is frightening, there are two probabilities that can be seen as reasons not to be terrified. Instead, people could be hopeful that research sparked by the publicity surrounding Mad Cow Disease will eventually bring answers to such sociologically and medically devastating diseases as Alzheimer's Disease, and other lesser known but just as deadly diseases such as Lou Gehrig's Disease. The paper shows that these two probabilities are first, that prion-caused diseases are much less prevalent than media hype would indicate and, second, that a cure or vaccination is relatively certain to be discovered in the near to medium term.

Paper Outline:
Introduction
Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
References

From the Paper
"Questions have arisen regarding why these particles are not attacked by the body's defense mechanisms, and the answer, Mahy noted, is that they are so odd, they are simply not recognized and therefore cannot be neutralized. Prions contain no nucleic acid and are therefore extremely " extremely resistant to inactivation by chemical or physical interventions that would inactivate viruses" (Mahy 1998) because there is no vector through which to deliver the 'poison'. Even more so than viruses, then, it is reasonable to wonder whether prions are, in fact, alive. And if they are not alive, then how can they infect an organism? Do they replicate like bacteria and viruses, or what?"
Term Paper # 3088 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Prions and Prion Diseases, 2001.
A discussion of the various aspects of prions and prion diseases.
1,307 words (approx. 5.2 pages), 4 sources, $ 44.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines the novel mechanism of disease transmittal in prions as well as the diseases themselves (mad cow disease and Creutzfeld-Jacobs disease). Functions of normal prions are also discussed. The paper also examines how prions are devoid of nucleic acids, and thus carry no information other than their tertiary structure.

From the Paper
"Knockout mice survived up to their 70th week, and then they began to display signs common with brain disease, which included a loss of motor coordination. Curiously, the symptoms shown by these knockout mice were similar to those found in many cases of prion diseases."
Term Paper # 31382 temporarily unavailable
Term Paper # 9011 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Madness in "Hamlet", 2002.
A critical review of Shakespeare's "Hamlet", with specific reference to the theme of madness.
2,180 words (approx. 8.7 pages), 1 source, MLA, $ 67.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper reviews "Hamlet" by Shakespeare, focusing on the concept of madness. It investigates what the nature of madness is and whether madness can even be defined in a "mad world". It then strives to espouse what a person can learn about his/herself by studying Hamlet's interaction with the concept of madness.

From the Paper
"Sometimes there's a fine line between madness and sanity. Sometimes there's a fine line between pretense and reality. Pretending madness for too long, could send one over the brink, especially if one has a propensity to brilliance, instability and overanalysis. Shakespeare asks his audience to look deeply into the themes he incorporates into his dramas, offering them an opportunity to explore how his ideas might apply to their own lives. In Hamlet Shakespeare weaves madness into a complex thematic tapestry. He is not asking us to decide if Hamlet is really mad, rather he is asking us to consider several questions: What is the nature of madness? Can madness even be defined in a mad world? What can I learn about myself by studying Hamlet's interaction with the concept of madness?"
Term Paper # 26183 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Madness of "Wuthering Heights", 2002.
A look at madness in Emily Bronte's "Wuthering Heights, focusing on Catherine Linton and Heathcliff and the effects of madness on themselves and the people around them.
1,389 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 46.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
By analyzing the novel, "Wuthering Heights" by Emily Bronte, this paper examines the effects of madness on the character Catherine Linton's health and concludes that her health problems were brought on by her temper and fits of rage. It also examines Heathcliff's sanity and how it effected his health. The paper takes into account Heathcliff's calculated revenge and draws similarities to William Shakespeare's character, Hamlet. It also shows how Heathcliff uses madness to control the character Isabella.

From the Paper
"Madness can assume many different forms: a concept demonstrated throughout Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights. Through both character development and their actions, Wuthering Heights presents various forms of madness in the characters and shows how this insanity affects not only the characters themselves but also those close to them. Many characters exhibit behaviors that appear to be "mad". Some, such as Catherine, may be truly insane while others may, at times, be feigning madness as a means to control the actions of others. Heathcliff also has tendencies that make him seem insane, but is he really? At times, his actions seem to contradict themselves, leading the reader to ponder the true meaning of insanity itself."
Term Paper # 46252 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Women and Madness, 2003.
A detailed look at society's vision of madness in women, focusing on African-American women. Discusses madness as a stereotypical temporary or long-term substitution for identity.
2,335 words (approx. 9.3 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 71.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
The analysis compares and contrasts different forms of so- called "madness" in female characters from the following novels: "Praisesong for the Widow," "Nervous Conditions," and "Juletane." It focuses on the battle for personal identity to overcome madness.

From the Paper
"What if mad people weren't mad? What if certain types of behaviour which simple ordinary people call madness, were just wisdom, a reflection of the clear sighted hypersensitivity of a pure, upright soul plunged into a real or imaginary affective void?" (Juletane, 2) Madness: a term so frequently used to describe nearly every socially deviant thing one might do or attribute to. If I were to spontaneously up-root myself and move to entirely new place (be it across the state, country, or sea) for no logical reason (in the mind of the one pushing labels), I might be considered mad. Someone in the grocery store cursing the tomatoes in aisle five, for being so ripe, may be considered mad. If one were to commit a homicide, they would surely be titled "mad." If you like green eggs and ham, Dr. Seuss fans might just label you mad. If you have metal all over your face and tattoos on your arms and legs, certainly you are mad. But then, what is this madness? If someone can be labeled as "mad" for all of the aforementioned, can we assume that "mad" is just a stereotype for one who deviates from the so-called norm? In this essay, I aim to prove that madness is indeed a stereotype aimed at differentiating between the socially "normal" and socially deviant individuals; represented by loss of identity and tradition, by guidance of the novels Praisesong for the Widow, Nervous Conditions, and Juletane."
Shopping Cart
Cart total : $ 0.00

Find Term paper
Search Guide

Search :


Category :
Paper No. :

Options
Show papers between
and pages
Display results per page
Currency :

Enter Coupon Code :
Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>