Answer:
Complicated grief.
Explanation:
There are a few kinds of grieving:<em> yearning-searching, hormonal grief, shock-numbness, complicated grief and disorganization-despair. </em>Alex is going through complicated grieving and I'm going to focus on that. Almost every person loses a loved one and it's the darkest time of one's life. As the time passes by, a person feels better and relieved. Some people don't feel better and the feeling of loss does not improve over time. In this condition, pain, emotions and grief last longer and are very severe, so it blocks a person from moving on with their own life. Some of the symptoms: sorrow and pain over loss of our loved one, not being able to focus on anything but their death, problems with dealing with the fact that they're gone, numbness, bitterness, wishing we were dead too, etc. This condition usually occurs in people who lost a loved one under very complex and heavy circumstances, like: suici*e, ra*e, car-crash, murd*r, etc.
Answer:monitoring the patients physical appearance, heart rate, skin temperature, and blood oxygen.
Explanation:
<span>The
answer to this question is electrocardiogram. Electrocardiogram or ECG is a
test that records the patient’s heartbeat and checks the electrical activity of
the patient’s heart. The electrodes that are placed on the skin of the patient
to capture the magnitude of the heart’s electrical depolarization and to check
any presence of heart muscle damage. </span>
Dynamic Warm-up:
A good dynamic warm-up is jumping jacks. You jump up, land with your legs about shoulder width apart and arms up, jump again and land with your arms down and legs together, and repeat those steps!
Static cool down:
And good static cool down is low lunges. You step out really far and lean into your leg, while the other stretches out behind you. Dot the same with other leg, and repeat a few times!