If there are no answer choices, then here is what I believe needs to be done:
Firstly, clean up the patient and dress them in clean garments as to decontaminate them.
Secondly, the nurse has to look at their chart. Is the patient allergic to anything in the medicine?
If there are no allergies known, then they can either A. Call the doctor to explain the situation and ask what needs to be done, or B. Look on the side affects of the medication. If it reads that in case of vomiting, stop medication immediately, then he/she can assume that the patient's body is not coping well to the medicine. At that point, with qualified expertise, can switch out for a different medicine that aids the client's condition.
Hope this helps. <3
Answer:
Cuticles
Explanation:
;) (don't ask me why i know)
The second line of defence is a group of cells, tissues and organs that work together to protect the body. This is the immune system.
When a pathogen (disease-causing organism) invades the body, the neutrophils gather at the entry site and try to engulf it and destroy it.
A T helper cell will recognise only one pathogen. If the T helper cell recognises the invader, it will immediately clone to increase numbers.
After a few days of fighting off the pathogen, you will recover from your infection.
Answer: C.early majority-use mass media to directly reach out to large numbers in priority populations
Explanation:
Diffusion theory of innovation suggests that how, why and at what rate the new ideas, opinions, technology and innovations spread among public from the innovators. The theory suggests that there are four main elements that influence the spread of the new ideas, innovations by itself, through communication channels, and via social system.
According to the given situation, mass media can reach upto a large mass worldwide and can spread the information about the tool for breast cancer. This is likely to remove any kind of doubts and will promote the sales according to the needs of the priority patients worldwide.
Answer:
Current evidence suggests that the virus spreads mainly between people who are in close contact with each other, typically within 1 metre (short-range). A person can be infected when aerosols or droplets containing the virus are inhaled or come directly into contact with the eyes, nose, or mouth.