Thursday, February 11, 2010

Why Would You Be A Hepatitis Carrier Why Would You Stereotype Someone With Hepatitis C?

Why would you stereotype someone with hepatitis C? - why would you be a hepatitis carrier

I'm doing a project on hepatitis C and stereotypes of people with her. I wonder, and to stereotypes of these people?

3 comments:

Stephani... said...

Well, folks, I personally stereotpe a disease, let alone, HCV, but spoke in a personal idea of how others see me here (oh go, click on the link to the site recently, a virus)

Okay. At first no one knew, including me, what happened to grow up, so that most cliches, it seems stupid, stupid, lazy, losers, etc. Once diagnosed, I'm happy, ecstatic even a diagnosis and a reason for almost 30 years fight to have.

(the other person is 8 years do not take drugs and do not live in a house of ill-BTW, not a reason for the capture of the HCV infection.)

I found that most of the stereotypes, because they refuse on the disease in question and learn the basis for their idealism in fear.

Because HCV is not:
some sexually transmitted diseases
a disease that is discriminatory

Since HCV is as follows:
HCV is a chronic disease of 88%. HCV non-discrimination that all age groups and races, rich or poor, the impact is veterans and everyday people who are, or with drugs and never did. Who visits nail design, tattoo, the health of workers, infants, toddlers, children, young people .... HCV is a disease of the liver, but in all reality is a blood disease. not only cause damage to the liver. Which all organs, including skin, heart, lungs, brain, endocrine system, which is infected, it is HCV. HCV particles in all body fluids other than blood are not infectious. Quality of life decreases as the disease progresses. If you have hepatitis C,You are sick, regardless of symptoms or disease, bi-directional or not.

You can see that the stereotypes narsasistic individuals who have a lack of knowledge. I know many who had unknowingly HCV (or are) we think would happen to them.

Gratia said...

I just discovered last Sunday that HCV may have so that I tomorrow (Friday) go to a blood test. Frankly, I'm shocked.
I do not know much about HCV - I only know that my aunt and lived to 87 He died of liver cancer or something, was in old age. My cousin is, and it goes well. She has a husband and a son, although they are not infected with HCV.
I know that in the past that the presence of HCV has been severely under-represented because of the reputation which had been estimated. Most people have to share needles or things like that. But it now shows that the veterans of the Vietnam War are also frequently HCV why I'm not sure.
I do not like stereotypes HCV, but perhaps because I'm biased, because it razadas to people who have.
It might have scared me, because I do not understand, not really. I know the boundaries, a prudent person would be infected with HCV, but I did not really know much about the past.
What frightens me the most is that next fall I am moving at the Academy of Gastronomy, and now I do not know if I leave ....
Is hepatitis C to my career as a chef and have my own business for event planning? Will I be allowed in the Culinary Academy?
I will not give up .... The kitchen is all that I do not want to ....
Sorry .... I know to stay away from the question, but if someone advice or answers would be very grateful ....

Miz Lamb said...

Most are drug addicts or criminals who were in prison or in jail. Some others live in very unhealthy and not live on. And some are just bad luck, and they do not deserve the stereotypes associated with hepatitis C

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