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In most developed nations across the globe, it is required for infants and certainly adults to be immunized against a variety of diseases. Really – who wants measles? Or how about chicken pox? These vaccinations were created to stem the tide of deaths that occurred throughout history from these diseases. Face it – medical practices [...]
Posted by William O'Dell on Friday, January 11, 2013 at 12:01 am
Filed under Health · Tagged aluminum, autism, brain damage, brain disorders, disease, flu, flu shot, influenza, injections, Jenny McCarthy, Mercury, misconceptions, myth, prenatal influenza shots, Schizophrenia, shots, vaccination, vaccines, well baby
The difference between perception and reality all depends on the angle sold to you, and whether or not you buy into it. With no other means to see a world beyond how far one can travel, media is crucial to bringing the greater world closer to home. However, when media fails to do that job [...]
Posted by Ryan Thomas on Tuesday, March 13, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under People · Tagged 2012, Amy Winehouse, anthrax, cell phones, charlie sheen, CNN, Davy Jones, facebook, flu, influenza, Janet Jackson, M.I.A., media sources, Microbiology, Nostradamus, osama bin Laden, Pandemics, Piers Morgan, Ryan Thomas, super bowl, swine flu, Swine influenza, twitter, Whitney Houston
Ever since the first American woman said “I deserve a right to vote,” we knew there was trouble coming. And guess what? From the available trends and data, it looks like we are looking at a future where American women as a whole have it better than American men. Even though it’s kind of un-American [...]
Posted by Dustin Koski on Tuesday, November 22, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Science · Tagged academia, adoption, adoption rate, Alzheimer's disease, America, bachelor pads, bachelors, behavior, cow hormones, flu, future, Gender, Gender role, houses, human behavior, job site, men, men vs women, money, Psychology, retirement, sickness, Social psychology, Social Security, the future, the future is female, unemployment, unemployment rate, United Kingdom, United States, United States of America, Wealth, what does the future hold, why the future is female, Women, women vs men, y chromosome dying out
The Influenza pandemic of 1918 caused more deaths than the four years of the Bubonic Plague. Not only did the pandemic kill more people than died in World War I, but it killed more people than all the wars of the 20th century combined. It is believed that the influenza pandemic of 1918 killed 25 [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Monday, April 11, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Health, History · Tagged Africa, AIDS, Animal virology, Army, Asia, Asian Flu outbreak, average flu, Avian influenza, Biology, Boston, brazil, Britain, British Army, bubonic plague, Camp Devens, Camp Funston, chemical structure, cholera, dangerous infectious diseases, dehydration, dengue, disease, epidemic, Epidemiology, Europe, every major influenza A, excess influenza, FDA, federal government, flu, Flu pandemic, Fort Riley, France, Germany, H3N2 influenza, Haskell, Haskell County, highly infectious disease, highly infectious nature, Human flu, illness, immune systems, infection, infectious disease, infectious diseases, influenza, Influenza A, Influenza A virus subtype H1N1, Influenza epidemic, Influenza pandemic, J.S. Oxford, Kansas, Kansas flu, King, La Grippe, Massachusetts, Medicine, Microbiology, milder seasonal flu, North America, oil form, Pandemics, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, plague, pneumonia, president, purulent bronchitis, Russian flu, scientist, seasonal flu, secondary infections, South Pacific, Southeast Asia, Spain, spanish flu, strain, strongest immune systems, The New York Times, The New York Times Co, Typhoid, U.S. Public Health Service, United Kingdom, United States, United States Army, Veteran's Day, well known influenza, woodrow wilson, World Health Organization
In today’s world when we think of healing someone, you probably think of medicine, vaccinations, and other common things that every doctor seems to use. However, in the past, before medicine wasn’t nearly as advanced as it is today, there were plenty of bizarre techniques used in order to heal or cure someone. Below is [...]
Posted by Ash Grant on Thursday, October 15, 2009 at 1:40 pm
Filed under Bizarre, Humor, People, Television · Tagged bloodletting, cons, cure, depression, disease, diseases, ECT, Electroshock Therapy, fire cupping, flu, Hirudotherapy, leeches, lobotomies, lobotomy, Maggot Debridement Therapy, maggots, Malaria, malaria drug, medical, Medicine, mental illness, moxibustion, nobel prize, therapy, top 10 bizarre healing techniques, trepanation, vaccination, virus, viruses, Walter Freeman
The death toll from it has yet to reach 100, but an outbreak of swine flu has gotten huge amounts of attention in the media in recent weeks. Even though regular flu viruses have killed thousands in that time, swine flu is all over the news because of worry that it could escalate into a [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Wednesday, May 20, 2009 at 1:01 am
Filed under Health, History · Tagged antonine plague, black death, bubonic plague, cholera, cholera pandemics, death, diseases, flu, infectious diseases, influenza, Malaria, Medicine, mosquito, mosquitoes, outbreak, pandemic, plague, plague of athens, Plague of Justinian, smallpox, spanish flu, swine flu, third pandemic, Typhoid, typhus, virus, viruses