Answer: The ones that apply for your question is the 1st, 3rd, and the 4th. There is slight chance for the 5th one too. But I think that it is just 1st, 3rd, and the 4th.
The ones that apply:
Making it harder for young people to buy nicotine and tobacco products
increasing taxes on nicotine and tobacco products
prohibiting the use of nicotine and tobacco products in public places
Why not the 2nd and not 4th?
Government won't fine adults, they have the right to use tobacco. They are adults after all. Charging retail outlets a high fee is a bad idea. Lots of adults are addicted to tobacco products. Raising a high fee won't change anything, they will just waste all their money on tobacco
Explanation:
Your answer is <em>True</em>.
It is indeed the safest way to deliver a baby.
Delivering a baby virginally is the safest way because, other way's like C secitions aren't a quite natural way.
Delivering a baby vaginally is very natural, and it's safer then a doctor giving a mother a c-section.
That being said, your answer is <em>True</em>.
Answer:
A. Tuberculosis
Explanation:
BCG vaccine (Bacillus of Calmette and Guérin) was created in 1921 by Léon Calmette and Alphonse Guérin. Protects against severe forms of tuberculosis, a contagious disease caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which mainly affects the lungs and, if untreated, can cause serious breathing problems, weight loss, weakness and even death. The vaccine is the only type of immunization against the disease and should be given as a single dose.
Pentavalent vaccine protects against 5 diseases: diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, poliovirus and infections caused by Haemophilus influenzae type b (meningitis, pericarditis, pneumonia, arthritis and osteomyelitis).
- Diphtheria causes inflammation and injury to parts of the airway and may lead to the death.
- Pertussis may progress to severe conditions with pulmonary, neurological, hemorrhagic complications and dehydration
- And polio in some cases causes paralysis, especially in the legs.
Unintentional Injury with an average of 12,341 people a year