A lot happened on the morning that Anna died. That morning she ate more glucose than she was supposed to because she is a diabetic. Anna went on a walk and then came back home. She had a diabetic emergency because of the high amount of carbohydrates she had eaten that morning. This is when she tried to inject insulin into her body to…
A new product on the market must have its own place and need. A wireless satellite system for entertainment purposes will allow the customers to serve multiple units within the same house without the need to run new wires. The focus will be the consumer and how this product will alleviate certain burdens on them.…
There are many reasons why Windows operating system could be called an event-driven application. The first reason why Windows operating system might be viewed as an event-driven application is that the start button on the operating system can be activated through a click event. This means if a user uses their mouse to click on the start button, the start button will activate and the start buttons list will appear with other functions. Nearly everything on the Windows operating system is event-driven. Another example of this is the fact that you can drag and drop most things on the operating system, you can drag applications and files to the recycling bin to dispose of, or you can drag an application or file to any destination on your computer, such as the documents folder in your hard drive. One more example that the Windows operating system can be referred to as an event-driven application, is the keyboard. The keyboard is event-driven because when a user presses a key on the keyboard, it is registered as a Key Down command. The Key Down command is linked with data that is also linked with the pressing of the key.…
She felt as if something was wrong with her womb; curious enough she was able to find a lump. The doctor she ended up seeing had never seen a tumor like it. The doctors would then take pieces to study, although the cells would die. The lady ended up dying from uremia. As the researcher discovered the cells wouldn’t die and double in size. The researchers were able to produce hundreds and thousands of the cells named the hela strain. Wanting to make a polio vaccine. Finding out that the hela cells replicated with polio. The hela cells were injected with every type of virus to try and find a vaccination.…
Richard Preston wrote the Cobra Event in 1997. Its characters and story is fictional but the science is real and based on what is possible. Real people working for the FBI and USAMRIID and other agencies were interviewed as to what could happen with current technologies. The author's other books are non-fiction and this story is based on so many expert's assistance that the story is almost looking into the future.…
The first major bioterror event in the United States--the anthrax attacks in October 2001--was a clarion call for scientists who work with "hot" agents to find ways of protecting civilian populations against biological weapons. In The Demon in the Freezer, his first nonfiction book since The Hot Zone, a #1 New York Times bestseller, Richard Preston takes us into the heart of Usamriid, the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick, Maryland, once the headquarters of the U.S. biological weapons program and now the epicenter of national biodefense.…
In the book, the fact that the book is non-fiction and is written as a documentary engulfs the reader and King's mind that it actually happened and is a part of history. It is something that you cannot erase no matter how much you would like to. It is morbid to see how the human race has had to suffer, though it was involuntary, for the scientists to learn about the virus and create a vaccine to cure and eradicate it.…
Though this true story has an anticlimactic ending, Johnson’s writing makes it a very fulfilling ending. The way he begins the novel by describing vividly the terrible hygiene and living conditions of that day makes the ending appropriate. Though it may seem as though he is building to the cure of cholera, he is actually building to the cure of an even bigger problem. The urgency of the cholera outbreak is almost a distraction to the bigger meaning of this novel. Snow and Whitehead may not have realized at the time what their map was helping London accomplish. Johnson points out in this novel that Snow and Whitehead’s research was actually part of a bigger plan. Their research sparked a movement to change the hygiene in London. Without this spark, London most likely would have experienced hundreds of other outbreaks. Johnson showed in this novel that through combined brain power and hard work, man can discover incredible solutions to the problems he…
Within Richard Preston’s, The Hot Zone, the very real threats posed by the deadly viruses of Marburg and Ebola Reston is brought to attention through the “terrifying true story”. In the first chapter, Charles Monet is introduced as a man with a little too much free time and works at the pump house at the sugar factory within near the base of Mt. Elgon. One day in 1980, he takes a female friend to Kitum Cave, and it is believed that this is the day he caught the Marburg virus. The first symptoms include a severe headache; but, three days later, he starts vomiting. It is mentioned his eyes become red, and his face starts to droop. His skin changes color to yellow, and there are red specks all over his body. Once he is taken to the hospital, he eventually passes out by throwing up black vomit, that is described to have his bowels and parts of his intestines. The black vomit was the proof of extreme amplification within Monet, and once Dr. Musoke had a hold of him, he saw that blood came out of every opening of his body. Dr. Musoke tries to transfuse Monet’s blood, but every place in his arm where the needle was stuck, the vein broke apart like cooked macaroni and spilled blood. Monet officially dies, and when he is opened for an autopsy, they find that his kidneys and livers are destroyed - yellowed and parts of it liquified. Later however, when the USAMRIID inspects Kitum Cave, they find no evidence of the Marburg virus. Today, there is still relatively little we know about Marburg.…
First Mitty's excessive research on small pox led him to believe that he has smallpox and showed symptoms of it. He thought it was from the scabs he inhaled before. Mitty needed the truth, and went asking questions to scientist of what he encountered, but his e-mails were forwarded to many different people. Many of them responded back with great interest, some said that there was the possibility of being infected. Mitty then went into a downward spiral, he didn't know what to do. He didn't want to infect other people if he did have smallpox, but if he told his parents he didn't want to be remembered as the one who brought smallpox in the world or set the whole world in panic. Mitty chose to commit suicide (leaving a letter of explanation behind for his family and friends) before the virus got infectious. I personally wouldn't do this because I would feel better just letting someone know instead of going through it alone. But the next day Mitty goes missing. The FBI get involved because Mitty could endanger the entire population. Only Mitty's family and closest friends (Olivia and Derek) are informed of the situation. At this point the story ends with the FBI agents talking to Olivia and Derek. I found that the main theme of the story is bioterrorism, proof of this is that many conversations the characters have amongst each other are circled around bioterrorism. One thing I really like about this book is the style…
Imagine you are walking to work on a Monday. As you walk you see a light mist in front of you, thinking nothing of it, you walk into the fog. Within seconds of inhaling the mist you collapse to the ground shaking violently, unable to breathe. Within minutes you and countless people around you are dead. What just happened was a chemical weapon attack with the nerve gas VX, one of the many chemical weapons out there in military warehouses and labs. Biological warfare is the deadly sister to chemical warfare, it uses diseases such as botulism and anthrax to try to wipe out soldiers and civilians alike. Even with the horrible side effects, if the weapons are caught early enough they can be treated and major…
Epidemiologist Marr and freelancer Baldwin (Ice Pick, 1982) team up to write a gripping (if styleless) suspenser about a mad scientist bringing down upon mankind the ten Biblical plagues of Exodus, plus one more for good measure. The dramatized plagues include bread-moldderived ergot from the rye fungus, which causes massive itching, cramps, spasms, and gangrene--as well as later centuries' smallpox, leprosy, Black Plague, syphilis, dysentery, TB, typhus, cholera, and AIDS, not to mention Ebola, Lyme, and more. World-class but crazy toxicologist Theodore ``Teddy'' Graham Kameron, abused as a child by his Bible-quoting mother and now led by a toxic Voice that he assumes must be God's, has been busy re-creating and distributing these basic plague cultures, inducing swarms of bees to attack humans, killing youngsters and horses with anthrax, breeding lice, pests, frog poisons, and much else, all in imitation of the wrath of God falling upon mankind (he has also wired himself up to catch the Voice if it comes to him in his sleep). Meanwhile, pitted against Teddy is epidemiological whiz Dr. Jack Brynne, who heads the ProMED computer hotline (quite real) and flies about the planet fighting epidemics. Jack's parents died from exposure to germ-warfare agents during Japanese tests at a WW II POW camp, though underweight Jack himself escaped testing. His busyness troubles his marriage with star-crossed fellow doctor Mia Hart, who dismisses Jack's idea that a Bible nut is at work. But his old lover, investigative TV journalist Vicki Wade, who does a sort of 60 Minutes show, does take him seriously (in every way). Culminating his campaign, Teddy extracts a superpoison from microscopic marine phytoplanktons. Ironically, the poison might also be a powerful new antibiotic--though that's not what Teddy has in mind. Is Manhattan ready for this (seemingly unstoppable) airborne killer? Creepy stuff. Wash your hands thoroughly after…
At this time, pro-cure and pro-death protesters were fighting more and more aggressively for and against the cure respectively. Just like the religious right fought against the stem cell research in chapter 6 of Dickenson’s bioethics in 2001, the religious devotees’ fight against the anti-aging cure and the Vatican issues a condemnation against it. Underground treatments known as black market cure were being perpetuated. Eventually John Farrell, the narrator got the cure at one of these underground markets. Within two weeks or there about, he convinced his friend to get the treatment and thereafter encountered a couple of tragic events associated with a mysterious woman that influenced his emotions throughout the story. Finally, the cure was legalized.…
In this movie, I Am Legend, due to the fact that everyone has either died from or been infected with the K-V virus, Will Smith portrays a man who is faced with an overwhelming sense of loneliness that he is determined to overcome. Taking place in an evacuated New York City, an outbreak of an uncommon disease took over the citizens. The disease attacks almost anyone who breathes it in. Within the first ten minutes of this movie, one witnesses a series of major life altering events that Robert goes through as an effect of this virus. As a highly ranked man of authority with the city Dr. Neville is one of first to find out about the virus and is given a chance to get his family with the evacuation team. Once he says his goodbyes to his wife and son, they board the last helicopter to depart from New York and to safety. The golden gate bridge was then bombed and in return cut off all pathways to get to safety. As soon as the helicopter with Dr. Neville’s family aboard started to hover away from the platform, panicking citizens ran to grab a hold and hopefully get a ride to the uninfected areas. Robert then watched as the helicopter took on too much weight and plummeted toward the water, where the…
The part of the text that I chose to respond to was when Jaggers, Comroe, Mancheck, and Wilson were reviewing the footage that Lieutenant Wilson captured during his flybys. The footage captured an old man walking amongst the dead bodies. My first reaction was of shock about the horror of the grisly scene, but then I thought “Why does that guy seem to create the deaths?” “Isn’t the bacteria supposed to be the cause of so many deaths?”. When I thought of these questions, I pondered about the chapters more and I inferred that there was a bacterium brought from outer space by a satellite. The old man was probably a survivor of the bacteria either he was immune or he took lots of meds. I contemplated that if the bacterium spread then the military could use what the old man had that prevented him from dying to help make a cure. I think I had this response because I watched a movie in biology like this, but in the movie a group of scientists wanted to get a cure before the government went to bomb the town. In the book the government was going to bomb the town anyway. In the movie, the president wanted to contain the disease, so he was going to bomb a town with lots of people who had interacted with the disease. The group of scientists was racing to find a cure. When they found one, the military officers tried to stop them because the virus was a potential biological weapon. I wanted to know if the government would bomb the town in the book then find a cure or find a cure before bombing. I think that the government would just bomb before because nobody was alive. I still don’t understand why the author said the disease causing pathogen was a bacterium because bacterium can be eliminated with…