There are choices for this question namely:
<span>1. Initiate oxygen therapy
2. Assess for a pleural friction rub
3. Obtain a chest x-ray film immediately
4. Place the client in a fowler's position
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The correct answer is that the nurse should "place the client in a fowler's position". The fowler's position is a position wherein the head and chest of the patient is elevated more than the lower extremities. In a patient with heart failure with tachypnea and bilateral crackles, the nurse should suspect pulmonary edema. By placing the patient in a fowler's position, the edema fluid in the lungs will gravitate towards the lower extremities, reducing pulmonary edema and reducing symptoms of dyspnea and tachypnea.
Answer:
B. When it stops for a brief moment at location B
The answer is ICD-10. It evolved from a classification developed by Dr. Jacques Bertillon. This is the diagnosis code standard which is now required for billing healthcare services. <span>Today, the ICD classification system is used throughout the world and is undergoing 11th revision. </span>
Answer:
Ozone, or trioxygen, is an inorganic molecule with the chemical formula O ₃. It is a pale blue gas with a distinctively pungent smell. It is an allotrope of oxygen that is much less stable than the diatomic allotrope O ₂, breaking down in the lower atmosphere to O ₂.Earth's ozone layer has been damaged by well-intentioned chemicals—chlorofluorocarbons, used for refrigerants and aerosol spray-cans—that have the unintended consequence of destroying ozone molecules.
Refraction- bending of light waves (ex. straw in a cup of water looks bent on a side but really is NOT, this is due to refraction, it bends the light waves reflected)
Luminescence- Creation/Emission/Starting or making of light through ways that DO NOT INVOLVE heat.
Ultraviolet- a wavelength that is part of the electromagnetic spectrum its shorter than visible light waves.