Category Archives: Case studies

Case Study on Obesity

Obesity Case Study:

Obesity is a very high level of fat which is accumulated in the body. When the quantity of body fat is too high, it starts to affect badly on the normal functioning of the human organism. People who suffer from obesity experience heart attacks, problems with digestion, bones and muscles.

Obesity is caused by various factors: enormous consumption of food, lack of physical activity,  genetic factors (obesity is very often inherited from generation to generation); but most often it is caused by endocrine disorders and psychological problems.
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Case Study on Kidney Stones

Kidney Stones Case Study:

A kidney stone is a crystal or stone formed in the kidneys from the range of minerals found in the urine. Nearly everyone experiences problems with kidney stones nowadays, especially in the old age. During the life people’s kidneys accumulate minerals in high concentrations and little stones are created. As a result old people experience big problems and have to be treated intensively.
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Case Study on Gay Marriage

Gay Marriage Case Study:

Gay marriage is the family union of the couple which belong to one gender. Gays all over the world demand the right to get married like the ordinary people and live normal life, but their desire is not always supported by the country’s government. Nevertheless, a great number of countries, including the European ones allowed gays to get married officially, besides they are given the right to adopt children. This decision is considered to be wise, because children have the right to live in a family, no matter what kind of family is, the only demand is love and care.
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Case Study on NonVerbal Communication

Non-Verbal Communication Case Study:

Nonverbal communication is usually understood as the process of communication through sending and receiving wordless (mostly visual) cues between people. Messages can be communicated through gestures and touch, by body language or posture, by facial expression and eye contact, which are all considered types of nonverbal communication. Speech contains nonverbal elements known as paralanguage, including voice quality, rate, pitch, volume, and speaking style, as well prosodic features such as rhythm, intonation, and stress. Continue reading

Case Study on Quality Management

Quality Management Case Study:

Quality management is the key branch of management which determines the success of business. Such kind of management embraces all the types and sub-types of management, because regulates and controls the aspects of business in the whole. Quality management contains several important aspects, like quality control, planning, prediction of the result, professional use of the gained profit. That means a good manager should be able to control business from all sides, every its stage connected with the production of goods and services, their delivery and improvement.
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Case Study on Nike

Nike Case Study:

Nike, Inc. is an American multinational corporation that is engaged in the design, development and worldwide marketing and selling of footwear, apparel, equipment, accessories and services. The company is headquartered near Beaverton, Oregon, in the Portl and metropolitan area. It is the world’s leading supplier of athletic shoes and apparel and a major manufacturer of sports equipment, with revenue in excess of US$24.1 billion in its fiscal year 2012 (ending May 31, 2012).

Nike is really one of the most successful producers of sports wear and equipment and they continue improving their position on the market. The success of Nike depends on the quality of its products. Moreover, like every corporation Nike spends great, even enormous sums on advertisement. The leading sportsmen of the world are paid to wear and advertise its equipment. Continue reading

Case Study on Immigration

Immigration Case Study:

Immigration is the movement of people into a country or region to which they are not native in order to settle there. Immigration is made for many reasons, including temperature, breeding, economic, political, family re-unification, natural disaster, poverty or the wish to change one’s surroundings voluntarily.

Immigration has always existed in the human society, because people always want better living conditions, new scenery and variety in life. On the other hand, immigration is not always the result of one’s wish, but of a necessity. Most often immigration is the result of wars and natural disasters. Continue reading

Case Study on Juvenile Confessions

Juvenile Confessions Case Study:

Young people often commit crimes and should be punished for their illegal actions strictly. On the other hand one should understand that severe punishment will not change the situation for the better or convince a young person not to commit crimes in future. Slight punishment is far more effective than the serious one, because it will be a serious lesson and experience for young person to change her life. When a teenager is caught by the police, he has two ways: to confess that he is guilty, or to deny his guilt. Continue reading

Case Study on Kodak

Kodak Case Study:

Eastman Kodak Company is the famous American company which produces film and cameras for photography. For more than half a century Kodak has been the leader and monopolist on the market of film, because its price and quality were balanced properly and were convenient for customers. Naturally, with the development of high technologies and new types of cameras, the necessity in film started to reduce. The purchase of film has been reducing rapidly for the latest ten years and now the situation of Kodak is tragic.
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Case Study on Dementia

Dementia Case Study:

Dementia is a serious loss of global cognitive ability in a previously unimpaired person, beyond what might be expected from normal ageing. It may be static, the result of a unique global brain injury, or progressive, resulting in long-term decline due to damage or disease in the body. Dementia is not a single disease, but a non-specific illness syndrome. Affected cognitive areas can be memory, attention, language, and problem solving. Normally, symptoms must be present for at least six months to support a diagnosis. Dementia is not merely a problem of memory. It reduces the ability to learn, reason, retain or recall past experience and there is also loss of patterns of thoughts, feelings and activities. Besides, people who suffer from this syndrome complain of constant pain, which is an additional burden for the organism. Doctors try to find effective medicine which can reduce pain and improve the condition of the patient but the process treatment continues quite long. Continue reading