Different Science Jobs
By: Fatih • Essay • 549 Words • December 22, 2009 • 931 Views
Essay title: Different Science Jobs
Forensic Pathologist performs autopsies to find out the cause of death and how the person had died. A forensic pathologist would look at wounds and injuries from the crime. They examine tissue specimens that may be part of a rape or another crime. Forensic pathologists also work closely with the coroner or medical examiner. They work as an expert in courts on civil or criminal law cases. In an autopsy, the forensic pathologist works with a Diener.
Epidemiologists’ work in the community, public health service, investigate and fight disease outbreaks; much work at the Centers for Disease Control. The epidemiologist work on issues from the practical: outbreak investigation, environmental exposure, and health promotion. To the theoretical, including the development of statistical, mathematical, philosophical, biological, and psychosocial theory. They can also define diseases, drawing disease causal chain / chains. Most of today’s epidemiologist use disease informatics as a tool.
Genetic engineers basically remove genes from one organism and put them into another organism. They can make organisms resistant to viruses or bacteria and make cells do things they never could have before. Some examples are genetically engineering plants to make their own insecticides, bacteria to make the enzymes used in cheese making, and sheep to make proteins used to treat hemophilia.
The coroner mainly just finds the name of the deceased, and then cause of death. If he or she decides to hold onto a body, the most likely verdicts would be: death by misadventure, accidental death, unlawful killing, lawful killing, suicide, natural causes, and an open verdict.The coroner used to have the power to decide the verdict in a case but now that is up to the courts. The coroner also has the power to arrest someone.
Virologists jobs on studying viruses include: their structure and classification, their ways to infect and exploit cells to reproduce and cause disease, the techniques to isolate and culture them, and their good uses in research and therapy.
Most neurologists