Answer:
3. Low-fat or fat-free milk and milk products:2-3 a day, Lean meats, poultry and fish:3-4 one-ounce servings or fewer a day, Nuts, seeds and legumes:3-4 a week, Fats and oils:2 a day, Sweets and added sugars:3 or fewer a week.
5. Eggs, Nut butter, Steel-cut oatmeal, Green vegetables, Nuts and seeds, Beans, Soy products, Lentils.
6. Lipids are a group of structurally and functionally diverse organic compounds that are insoluble in water. Certain classes of lipids, such as fats, phospholipids, and steroids are crucial to all living organisms. They function as structural components of cellular membranes, energy reservoirs, and signaling molecules.
7. A whole-grain burrito filled with eggs, bell peppers and black beans served with a glass of milk and an orange is a sample breakfast.
Answer:
I believe it's C because B they have temporary relationships and I know A and D aren't true
Answer: False
Explanation:
Privacy Rule permits this practice as long as the clinic takes reasonable and appropriate measures to protect the patient’s privacy. The physician or other health care professionals use the patient charts for treatment purposes. Incidental disclosures to others that might occur as a result of the charts being left in the box are permitted, if the minimum necessary and reasonable safeguards requirements are met. See our section on Incidental Uses and Disclosures. As the purpose of leaving the chart in the box is to provide the physician with access to the medical information relevant to the examination, the minimum necessary requirement would be satisfied.
Examples of measures that could be reasonable and appropriate to safeguard the patient chart in such a situation would be limiting access to certain areas, ensuring that the area is supervised, escorting non-employees in the area, or placing the patient chart in the box with the front cover facing the wall rather than having protected health information about the patient visible to anyone who walks by. Each covered entity must evaluate what measures are reasonable and appropriate in its environment. Covered entities may tailor measures to their particular circumstances. See 45 CFR 164.530(c).
I think the answer to this is go to your doctor and let him figure out your health problem. After that you should make steps to make that health problem better. I hope this helps! :)
Pretty sure the answer would be parent.