Practice In Nursing Health
$135.00
Risk-taking behaviors have been the subject of much speculation, from Sigmund Freud’s belief that dare-devil stunts arise out of humans’ innate “death drive,” to some modern psychologists’ view that dangerous activities can make us feel more alive. In general, we think of risky behavior as encompassing activities only a handful of courageous, or “crazy,” people would attempt, including skydiving, rock climbing, cliff jumping, or other dramatic exploits. In reality, though, risk-taking behaviors also include more mundane acts, like having unprotected sex, gambling, robbing banks, and taking drugs. The reasons for these behaviors are complex, although not mysterious, and can mean different things to different people. In general, though, as poet Robert Browning wrote, “Our interest’s on the dangerous edge of things.
Practice In Nursing Health
$135.00
Risk-taking behaviors have been the subject of much speculation, from Sigmund Freud’s belief that dare-devil stunts arise out of humans’ innate “death drive,” to some modern psychologists’ view that dangerous activities can make us feel more alive. In general, we think of risky behavior as encompassing activities only a handful of courageous, or “crazy,” people would attempt, including skydiving, rock climbing, cliff jumping, or other dramatic exploits. In reality, though, risk-taking behaviors also include more mundane acts, like having unprotected sex, gambling, robbing banks, and taking drugs. The reasons for these behaviors are complex, although not mysterious, and can mean different things to different people. In general, though, as poet Robert Browning wrote, “Our interest’s on the dangerous edge of things.
Public Health Diseases
$135.00
Human evolution and parasitic infections have run hand in hand, and thanks to the spinoffs from the Human Genome Project, we now know much more about the origins of the human race than ever before. Sometime, about 150,000 years ago, Homo sapiens emerged in eastern Africa and spread throughout the world, possibly in several waves, until 15,000 years ago at the end of the Ice Age humans had migrated to and inhabited virtually the whole of the face of the Earth, bringing some parasites with them and collecting others on the way.
Public Health Diseases
$135.00
Human evolution and parasitic infections have run hand in hand, and thanks to the spinoffs from the Human Genome Project, we now know much more about the origins of the human race than ever before. Sometime, about 150,000 years ago, Homo sapiens emerged in eastern Africa and spread throughout the world, possibly in several waves, until 15,000 years ago at the end of the Ice Age humans had migrated to and inhabited virtually the whole of the face of the Earth, bringing some parasites with them and collecting others on the way.