Therefore, she persistently tried to meet with a medical professional. However, even when she met with one, her actual mass was never truly investigated. Finally, another fact is the medical professionals had a duty to Tomcik and were supposed to fully listen to her concerns and examine her. However, they did not perform their job to the fullest capability. Tomcik was only truly examined and diagnosed about 6 months after discovering her
“The Cardboard Room” by Teresa Pitman is about a teenage girl who comes from a judgmental family. Particularly, they are not fond of a refugee family, who according to them do not belong. When assigned to work on a project with a member of the family, Eric Nye, she begins to understand how someone’s appearance does not define who they truly are. After spending more time with Eric and his family she quickly realizes that people should not be judged and criticized for their circumstances. Eric informs the protagonist about events that happened back home and the struggles it took to get where they are today.
In the first section, he gives numerous examples of how normal his life was before the diagnosis. He recounts his childhood and his beginnings of how he loved to read because of his mother. He tells of when he would stay out late reading in the starlight to come home to his mother worried that he was doing drugs, but “the most intoxicating thing I’d experienced, by far, was the volume of romantic poetry she’d handed me the previous week” (27). He continues with all of his life before cancer, but when he gets the results he says “One chapter of my life seemed to have ended; perhaps the whole book was closing” (120). The rest of the book, the closing of his book as he calls it, focuses on examples of how cancer changed his
As the camera zoomed in onto a sad little girl after the loss of her sister, I realized that the documentary, Burzynski: Cancer is Serious Business would be a difficult film to watch. Movies that depict dying children are often full of drama and heartache and this was no different. I was appalled at the treatment of these poor innocent patients and their families, and the movie had just begun. As I continued to watch the movie; however, my opinion changed from outrage that the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) would be so corrupt and unjust, to realizing that maybe the movie was playing with my emotions. Although effective in using good rhetorical strategies, the viewer must separate emotion and drama from lack of evidence and
Cheryl Mattingly’s Moral Laboratories is an article, detailing the struggles of having sick children with sickle cell anemia, analysing the series of events both mother and daughter face in light of chronic illness (99). This reading revolves around the story of Dotty, a dedicated mother, and her 9 year-old daughter Betsy. Dotty’s life is solemnly focused on her daughter’s health, treatments, and happiness. Betsy condition of sickle cell, influences Dotty’s ambition to discover treatments and learn more about the disease.
I realized that I became more focused on the patient’s rather than my own personal gain. Then, one day, it hit me. As we were reading about Henrietta’s treatment as a patient, I was infuriated at the fact that these doctors and scientists weren’t giving Henrietta and her family the treatment, recognition, money, health-care, and equality they deserved. Even though I couldn’t imagine the hardship their family went through, I put my foot into the patient’s shoes. Reading about the pain and poverty Henrietta’s family went through, after her death, I kept thinking that if the doctors treated Henrietta equally, there could’ve been a chance of her survival.
In the novel "Ghost Wall," written by Sarah Moss, the author explores the theme of how traditions and expectations can confine and restrict the characters, preventing them from personal growth and freedom. Moss adeptly portrays this notion through the experiences of Silvie, the protagonist, and her family during an immersive archaeological reenactment. Firstly, the weight of tradition imposes rigid roles and responsibilities on the characters. Silvie's father, Bill, is deeply entrenched in his belief of an idealized past, where ancient practices are revered.
Physicians refer to Henrietta as “patient” and repeatedly place her behind her medical issues (Skloot, 2011). The lack of person first language results in an emphasis of the disease and not the individual. “Attributing a lack of [human] traits to people is akin to explicitly or implicitly perceiving or acting toward those people as though they lack the capacity to feel” (Yang, Jin, He, Fan, & Zhu, 2015). Scientists lost sights of Henrietta Lack as a human being: a creature of the same emotional capacity of themselves. The abbreviation of Henrietta’s cells to “HeLa” further works to distance the cells from their owner – a woman with thoughts, emotions and relationships.
Terry Fox has brought hope, inspiration and change to countless amounts of lives. With his courageous and ambitious spirit, he single handedly started a revolution. His selfless deeds are still talked about to this day. A hero is defined as someone who is idolized by many because of a noble and outstanding achievements and that is exactly who Terry is. Terry Fox transformed the face of cancer with his big dreams and bigger actions.
First off, the letter x is one of the coolest looking letters in the alphabet. It’s one of those letters that aren’t used very much but when it is used it protrudes out from the crowd. If I could just choose one letter I would want one that is rare and cool looking. Another cool thing about x is that it sounds cool, for instance look at the word xylophone, or extra, the x is the main point of the word. Unlike Hester Prynne in The Scarlet Letter I would have warn x on my body if I had to choose a letter.
During this scene of the chapter, the reader is introduced to a room in which Oliver is grateful to call his own. It is in this room where one would walk in to find Oliver sitting by a window, amidst piles of books, studying to further his knowledge about the world. The author uses this room as a symbolic image to represent Oliver’s starting point on his path to an education. The room happens to be on the “ground-floor” of the novel because his journey has only just begun. The books that pile themselves upon his desk are there to associate the reader with the experience of learning and discovering new information.
Meanwhile, those sick with tuberculosis had an increased appetite but had no way to satisfy their hunger. This made people see those with cancer as the more fortunate, even though both diseases are terrible. Tuberculosis was also thought to be helped by a change of scenery, by moving from a damp city to a dry place. But cancer could not be helped by changing the environment because it is the body’s cells becoming malignant. Therefore, if cancer would be cured, it would have to be fought inside the body with no help from the environment.
Purpose: The purpose of this speech is to persuade a parent whose child has received a diagnosis of Autism Spectrum Disorder to provide their child with critical early life intervention therapy as well as educate the parent on ABA therapy in addition to touching on a handful of other possible therapies. After delivering this speech, I want my audience to understand why early intervention will provide their child with the best chance of matriculation into society later in life. I want to prompt every audience member to research further therapies available as treatment for their child’s disorder and ultimately decide to enroll their child in a therapy. Intended Audience: My perfect audience would be parents and family members in relation to a young child, between the ages of eighteen months and three years old, that has recently been diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder.
The unsatisfying setting that appears around the ill woman unravels an understanding
This combination of many mind and life altering diagnoses leads to an interesting point of view, and a deeper look into the lives of people living with the