Answer:I don't know for shore but I <u>THINK</u> that the answer is true. I could be mistaken though.
A delusion or, more generally, a psychotic break.
Answer:
While pregnant your placenta makes hormones that cause a glucose buildup in your blood. Your pancreas can usually send enough incline to handle it but if your body cant make enough incline or stops using incline like it should, there will be to much sugar in the blood therefore developing gestational diabetes.
Explanation:
Answer:
In an unconscious/unresponsive adult, the preferred pulse point is the carotid artery.
Explanation:
<u>Unlike a conscious patient, the chief question we're trying to answer when checking the pulse is if they have one. Someone that's awake and talking obviously does, but that can't be assumed in an unconscious person, so it makes sense to go for the strongest point first. The absence of a pulse at any other point would not indicate the absence of a heartbeat, only that it isn't strong, enough to reach those more distal points.</u>
<u>Unlike a conscious patient, the chief question we're trying to answer when checking the pulse is if they have one. Someone that's awake and talking obviously does, but that can't be assumed in an unconscious person, so it makes sense to go for the strongest point first. The absence of a pulse at any other point would not indicate the absence of a heartbeat, only that it isn't strong, enough to reach those more distal points.Unlike a conscious patient, we aren't concerned with alarming them or building rapport, so there's no downside to going right to the most reliable pulse point.</u>
<u>Unlike a conscious patient, the chief question we're trying to answer when checking the pulse is if they have one. Someone that's awake and talking obviously does, but that can't be assumed in an unconscious person, so it makes sense to go for the strongest point first. The absence of a pulse at any other point would not indicate the absence of a heartbeat, only that it isn't strong, enough to reach those more distal points.Unlike a conscious patient, we aren't concerned with alarming them or building rapport, so there's no downside to going right to the most reliable pulse point.An unconscious person is at greater risk of an immediately life-threatening situation, so a more aggressive approach is justified.</u>