The diagrams show data for a flu epidemic which hit a large country town in 1996. Figure 1 gives the number of persons who died; Figure 2 shows the percentage breakdown of females who received a new flu vaccine; and Figure 3 gives the number of cases of flu before and during the epidemic.
Figure 1 /seen /flu /responsible /deaths / 2 females but no males / March to May. However, /June to August, /4 female deaths / 1 male death.
According to the pie chart in Figure 2, only/ females /risk / given the new flu vaccine; 28% did not /trial. Of those females who took part, 35% /(over 65 years old); 24% /babies or children; and 13%/hospitalised / other medical attention.
From Figure 3 /the new vaccine / positive effect /new cases of flu reported in females. There were /1000 cases reported in March,/a peak of 3500 in June. Thereafter, the number of cases dropped slowly to about 2800 in August, before levelling off at 2500 for the rest of the year. For males, the figures were lower but showed a similar trend throughout the epidemic.
Conversation questions: healthhttp://iteslj.org/questions/health.html
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
model answer:
ReplyDeleteThe diagrams show data for a flu epidemic which hit a large country town in 1996. Figure 1 gives the number of persons who died; Figure 2 shows the percentage breakdown of females who received a new flu vaccine; and Figure 3 gives the number of cases of flu before and during the epidemic.
In Figure 1 it can be seen that the flu was responsible for the deaths of 2 females but no males in the period from March to May. However, from June to August, there were 4 female deaths and 1 male death.
According to the pie chart in Figure 2, only those females most at risk were given the new flu vaccine; 28% did not take part in the trial. Of those females who took part, 35% were aged (over 65 years old); 24% were babies or children; and 13% were either hospitalised or receiving other medical attention.
From Figure 3 it is clear that the new vaccine had a positive effect on the number of new cases of flu reported in females. There were just over 1000 cases reported in March, climbing rapidly to a peak of 3500 in June. Thereafter, the number of cases dropped slowly to about 2800 in August, before levelling off at 2500 for the rest of the year. For males, the figures were lower but showed a similar trend throughout the epidemic.
(232 words)