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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper provides basic facts about the disease inclusive of types, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment. New breakthroughs, and false hopes, are duly noted. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA215Lk.rtf
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have shown some promise. Childhood leukemia is particularly devastating because society embraces children as more important than the rest of society. Their lives are just beginning and society feels a
need to keep young people healthy and out of trouble. Above all, children have their whole lives ahead of them and are disproportionately affected by this dreaded condition. However, when
the disease strikes either a child or an adult, there is little anyone can do to protect the person from inevitable deterioration. And while there is no cure per se,
a great deal of strides have been made to combat the symptoms of the disease. Leukemia is a term that is used to describe a number of blood cancers,
and is a condition that seems to exacerbate the white blood cell count (Visalli 272). In 2001, it is estimated that about 31,500 Americans would develop leukemia and 2,100 of
those patients would be children("Leukemia " 6) . In total, about 21,500 people would die of the disease in 2001 (6). While leukemia only accounts for a relatively small
amount of cancer types that are diagnosed in the United States each year, they are the predominant types that occur in children (Steen and Mirro 14). This suggests
different causes of adult and childhood cancer, something that could in fact be a significant reason why the outcome of treatment is better for children (14). Despite
an increase in the number of children who get the cancer, the chances of being cured is further, consistently increasing; as a result, better diagnoses and more effective treatment is
effected (14). For every 100,000 children under the age of 15 in the United States, less than three died of cancer in 1999 (14). That is not bad
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