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g100num [7]
2 years ago
10

A client diagnosed with agoraphobia who experiences panic attacks is talking with a nurse about the progress made in treatment.

which client statement indicates a positive response to treatment?
Medicine
1 answer:
vfiekz [6]2 years ago
6 0

The statement which indicates a positive response to treatment is " I went to the mall with my friends last saturday".

<h3>What is agoraphobia?</h3>

Agoraphobia is a condition of extreme and unusual irrational fear of crowded places. A person suffering from agoraphobia will feel fear while entering in crowded places such as shopping malls, museums, zoo etc.

Agoraphobia is a disorder in which anxiety happens while facing crowd. In this case treatment helps but the condition cannot be cured.

The main symptoms of agoraphobia are increased heart rates,feeling pressure in chest, and sweating.

Therefore, statement which indicates a positive response to treatment is " I went to the mall with my friends last saturday".

Learn more about agoraphobia here:

brainly.com/question/25503617

#SPJ4

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The circulatory system transports and distributes essential substances to tissues and removes metabolic byproducts. This system also participates in homeostatic mechanisms such as regulation of body temperature, maintenance of fluid balance, and adjustment of O2 and nutrient supply under various physiological states. The cardiovascular system that accomplishes these tasks is composed of a pump (the heart), a series of distributing and collecting tubes (blood vessels), and an extensive system of thin vessels (capillaries) that permit rapid exchange between the tissues and vascular channels. Blood vessels throughout the body are filled with a heterogeneous fluid (blood) that is essential for the transport processes performed by the heart and blood vessels. This chapter is a general, functional overview of the heart and blood vessels, whose functions are analyzed in much greater detail in subsequent chapters.

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In the normal intact circulation the total volume of blood is constant, and an increase in the volume of blood in one area must be accompanied by a decrease in another. However, the distribution of blood circulating to the different regions of the body is determined by the output of the left ventricle and by the contractile state of the resistance vessels (arterioles) of these regions. The circulatory system is composed of conduits arranged in series and in parallel (Fig. 15-1). This arrangement, which is discussed in subsequent chapters, has important implications in terms of resistance, flow, and pressure in blood vessels.

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