Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Environmental Health Issues. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 7 page paper which discusses the relationship of our environment to our health.
The bibliography has 2 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_JHEnvi.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Everything that is done in the world has a direct affect on something else or on may other things. It is true that for every action there is
a reaction. DISCUSSION Is the environment really important when it comes to the issue of human health? In 1962 the Silent Spring a publication with limited circulation
initiated a concern on behalf of the scientific community when it linked human health to the environment (Eyles and Consitt, 2004). The public also became alerted to the potential hazards
of the environmental interactions on human health. Despite over forty years of being aware of the potential and obvious problems, scientists today remain concerned about possible epidemics of lifestyle
diseases and think that genetic research is the next plausible step. However, the relationship between the environmental exposures and human health are still debated. As an example, there is continuing
debate about the causes of all cancer within the scientific community. Behavioral factors and lifestyle choices such as unhealthy diets and tobacco use are tagged as being the main
causes of cancer. Even the World Health Organization (WHO) has estimated that only 2 percent of all cancers are caused by air pollution and only 5 percent of all cancers
are caused by occupational hazards and exposures (Eyles and Consitt, 2004). The epidemic of lifestyle diseases is the label given to such diseases as diabetes, cardiovascular disease and other
certain cancers (Eyles and Consitt, 2004). Well, if that is true, then why worry about the environment? It is hard to designate the actual affect of environment exposure on
human health. The typical scientific evidence which attempts to support the associations between human disease and environmental contaminants is generally confined to a study of extremely high exposures resulting
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