Answer:
Health benefits (insurance), a payment received through a health insurance. Health benefit (medicine), the phenomenon that a food, substance or activity is improving health. Health claim, a usually unproven claim as to medical health benefits of food, etc.
The Nutrition Facts label is required by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on most packaged foods and beverages. The Nutrition Facts label provides detailed information about a food's nutrient content, such as the amount of fat, sugar, sodium and fiber it has
Explanation:
Answer:
The correct answer is option B
b) Hold the dose and call the result to the physician.
Explanation:
Giving 2 doses at once, giving the dose and chart the results, or checking the vital signs and place them on bleeding precautions will be wrong.
Assessing therapeutic heparin effect is the right thing to do.
Tumors are groups of metastatic cells that may be benign or malignant cells. It is a distinctive feature of cancer.
<h3>Cancer and tumors</h3>
Cancer is a multifactorial disease characterized by the emergence of metastatic cells that proliferate in an uncontrolled manner to form a tumor.
There are situations where cancer only can be diagnosed by obtaining a small tissue sample, which is known as a biopsy.
Cancer can be classified as benign cancer or malign cancer depending on the proliferative nature of cancer cells and their ability to produce metastasis (malignant cells produce metastasis).
Learn more about cancer here:
brainly.com/question/11710623
Presented by Nora D. Volkow, M.D. Director, National Institute on Drug Abuse National Institutes of Health Department of Health and Human ServicesCongressional Caucus
Thank you for inviting the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), a component of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), an agency of the Department of Health and Human Services, to participate in this forum and contribute what I believe will be useful insight into the growing public health problem of prescription drug abuse in this country.
Introduction to the Problem
In 2009, 7 million Americans reported current (past month) nonmedical use * of prescription drugs—more than the number using cocaine, heroin, hallucinogens, and inhalants combined 1. National surveys show that the number of new abusers of several classes of prescription drugs increased markedly in the United States in the 1990s 2, continuing at high rates during the past decade—abuse of prescription drugs now ranks second (after marijuana) among illicit drug users 3. Perhaps even more disturbing, approximately 2.2 million Americans used pain relievers nonmedically for the first time in 2009 (initiates of marijuana use were 2.4 million).