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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 8 page argument that while governmental intervention in private enterprise is often controversial, rigid restaurant inspections are a necessity in insuring public health. The author describes the potential impacts of just one disease, Escherichia coli, to make this demonstration. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPrstrnt.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
play there is a certain degree of controversy which results. Such is the case with restaurant inspections. Anyone who has ever had the enlightening experience of visiting the
restroom of a public restaurant and witnessing a restaurant employee leaving the stall and heading straight outside the door without washing their hands, however, would agree that restaurants should receive
both more vigorous and more frequent public health inspections. The horrors revealed to the world with the advent of hidden cameras further strengthen this argument. In addition to
insuring a greater degree of public health, rigid restaurant inspections can insure employee health and welfare as well. The purpose of this paper, therefore, is to present the argument
that stepped-up restaurant inspections are a necessity rather than any sort of intrusion on the capitalistic free enterprise ideology which serves as the backbone of this countrys economy.
Restaurants stand at the center of a whole variety of public health threats. If any one of these threats, however, stands in testament to
the need for strict and thorough restaurant inspections, it is Escherichia coli. This bacteria is a member of the Enterobacteriaceae family. This family is comprised mostly of aerobic,
Gram-negative bacilli, many of which cause gastroenteritis in humans. Escherichia coli is comprised of numerous strains, each of which results in different symptoms in the infected human.
Noninvasive diarrhea results when a person contracts enterotoxic Escherichia coli. While Escherichia coli is associated with diarrheal symptoms, the bacteria
can only be blamed for a relatively small portion of the outbreaks of diarrhea which occurs among the general public. Indeed, there are numerous other organisms which cause diarrhea
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