Prepare For The Postpartum Period A postpartum period or postnatal period is the period beginning immediately after the birth of a child and extending for about six weeks. The World Health Organization (WHO) describes the postpartum period as the most critical and yet the most neglected phase in the lives of mothers and babies. The postpartum period can be a trying time- there are sleepless nights, hormones causing your emotions to range from anger and depression to exhilaration and joy and the
variolation. Smearing of a skin tear with cowpox to confer immunity to smallpox was also practiced in China in the 17th century. Edward Jenner is considered the founder of vaccinology in the West in 1796, after he inoculated a 13 year-old-boy with vaccinia virus (cowpox), and demonstrated immunity to smallpox. The first smallpox vaccine was developed in 1798. Over the 18th and 19th centuries, systematic implementation of mass smallpox immunisation culminated in its global eradication in 1979.9 Louis Pasteur’s
Fever is to be controlled with apririn In cases of severe pneumonia , antibiotics and fluids may be injected into the veins. 1.10 Complications The possible complications following pneumonia could be : • Acute respiratory distress syndrome • Pleural effusion • Lung abscesses • Respiratory failure • Sespis (leading to organ failure) 1.11 Transmission Pneumonia can be transmitted in a number of ways. The viruses present in a childs nose , can cause inf ection in the lungs if inhaled.It can also be
Paget’s disease is a chronic disorder or condition that increases the formation of bone at an exceedingly rapid rate in a particular, isolated area. It’s the second most common bone disease discovered in elderly men and women and is in no way considered to be a bone cancer. It all begins with the osteoclasts. These remove and absorb old bone matter so it can be replaced with stronger and denser bone; however these cells become overly active and take away more bone than necessary, weakening it. This
Alex Selawry IB Math Exploration Modeling the Spread of Infectious Diseases December 2014 Introduction: Infectious diseases, pandemics or epidemics have plagued (no pun intended) humankind for as long as we can remember. Some notable diseases we have fought through are for example the Black Death, or Black plague that crept up from Asia and killed an estimated 75 million people in the 13th century, wiping out 25 to 50% of the European population. HIV or AIDS is another well-known pandemic that