Zambia is a country like any other prone to a wide variety of natural and human-induced hazards and disasters. Phenomena such as floods‚ extreme wind speeds‚ earthquakes‚ mudslides‚ droughts‚ wildfires‚ pest plagues‚ air and water pollution cause extensive losses to livelihoods and property‚ and claim many lives. This study attempts to bring to light disasters or hazards‚ there examples‚ as well draw attention to the challenges faced by the government of Zambia in controlling the disasters or hazards
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This article is about the microorganisms. For the genus‚ see Bacterium (genus). For other uses‚ see Bacteria (disambiguation). Bacteria Temporal range: Archean or earlier – Recent Scanning electron micrograph of Escherichia coli bacilli Scientific classification Domain: Bacteria Phyla[1] gram positive/no outer membrane Actinobacteria (high-G+C) Firmicutes (low-G+C) Tenericutes (no wall) gram negative/outer membrane present Aquificae Deinococcus-Thermus Fibrobacteres–Chlorobi/Bacteroidetes
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What medical services were available in the Crimea? The medical knowledge of the time were limited which reflected on the medical services that were available in the Crimea to help the sick and wounded soldiers. How were the medical services organised? * 1853‚ the Army Medical Department + the Ordnance Medical Department were moved under Dr Andrew Smith. * Had not been done before as the Duke of Wellington had opposed reform of the medical system. * Andrew Smith had to create a
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would not have been particularly successful. Before a world of modern chemistry‚ humans had very limited ways of preserving foods. It would be very hard to find clean water nowadays if it weren’t for chemistry. Deadly waterborne diseases such as cholera‚ dysentery and typhoid would be very common. Without chemistry‚ we would not be able to understand the composition of food. We would not be able to tell what foods are good for us and what foods are bad. We would not be able to estimate the shelf
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Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky is from the the musical time period of the Romantic Era [1820-1910]. He was born in 1840 in present day Udmurtia‚ Russia. He died on November 6th‚ 1893 in St. Petersburg because of cholera. He received training from a teacher when he was younger and he also studied at the Russian Musical Society in 1861. He later studied at St.Petersburg Conservatory. In his childhood he has piano lessons at the age of 5. By the time he was 8 he knew all of the notes ‚just as well
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management? Solid wastes‚ when improperly disposed off can be an environmental hazard in that the surrounding environment as well as the fish is affected. This improper damping can lead to death of fish as well as diseases to man e.g. dysentery‚ cholera and so on. Some of these wastes can also be very harmful to the atmosphere. These wastes when improperly dumped into the atmosphere can lead to the destruction of the ozone layer and may cause diseases such as cancer. As a result there is problem
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I believe everyone should be vaccinated in their life and here is why. Vaccines cause your immune system to produce disease-fighting antibodies without causing the disease itself. Today‚ more than 20 serious human diseases can be prevented by vaccination. For some diseases‚ you need to be vaccinated only once in your life. For other diseases‚ such as measles‚ tetanus‚ and influenza‚ you may need to be vaccinated at regular intervals. Well‚ in the past‚ smallpox killed hundreds of millions of people
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In Charles Sellers’s book The Market Revolution: Jacksonian America‚ 1815-1846 (1994)‚ he wrote about how the Market Revolution was not only a defining moment for America‚ but also the world. America had recently broken free of English rule and was determined to become a free and independent country. This determination led to many changes in politics‚ social attitudes‚ economics‚ urbanization‚ and self-reliance. And because of this‚ the rest of the world had to do the same. England did not have
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Kurane‚ I. (2010). The effect of the global warming on infectious diseases. Public Health Res Perspect 2010 1(1)‚ 4-9. doi: 10.1016/j.phrp.2010.12.004 Lipp‚ E. K.‚ Huq‚ A. & Colwell‚ R. R. (2002). Effects of global climate on infectious disease: the cholera model. Clinical microbiology reviews‚ 15(4)‚ 757 – 770. Loaiciga‚ H. A.‚ Valdes‚ J. B.‚ Vogel‚ R.‚ Garvey‚ J. & Schwarz‚ H. (1996). Global warming and the hydrologic cycle. Journal of Hydrology‚ 174(1)‚ 83 – 127. Shuman‚ E. K. (2011). Global Climate
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CSEC BIOLOGY SUMMER RESEARCH PAPER DISEASE & ITS IMPACT ON HUMANS This research is aimed at informing the reader on different types of diseases and the impact it has on humans. Enclosed herein are details on the types‚ treatments‚ transmissions and descriptions of different diseases in the region and around the world.
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