Answer:
The HIPAA security rule defined the technical security safeguards under the following categories : Access control, Audit control, Integrity, Authentification and transmission security.
Explanation:
Apart from the administrative and physical safeguards, the HIPAA requires from all facilities dealing with health information to:
- determiine the right user with permissions to carry out their defined functions through the facility programs or information systems (access control),
- establish and implement all hardware, software and procedures that have to record, analyse or transmit health data (audit control),
- establish security measures to avoid alteration or modification of health information that is transmitted electronically, without detection (integrity),
- ensure all users are verified and authorised to carry out their functions (authentification),
- safeguard data transfer and prevent unauthorised transmission ( transmission safety).
Other measure that could be addressed include encrypting health data, automatic log-off and also adapting the type of control to the size of the the facility and possibly reduce cost.
Agoraphobia. Agoraphobia is an irrational and intense fear which a person experiences when she is on some place where she feels that escape would be difficult or impossible (for example: a lot of people on one place, wide streets, train or bus trips, cinema, theaters...).
The answer is letter a –
projective test. A projective test is a kind of personality
test in which an individual offers reactions to vague scenes,
words, or pictures. The aim of such tests is to expose the hidden struggles,
conflicts, or feelings that
the individual projects onto the test with the confidence that these issues can
then be addressed through psychotherapy or
other suitable treatments. The Inkblot Test is a type of projective
psychological test containing of 10 inkblots printed on cards.
When the bat hits the ball, it exerts some force on the ball. Just think about a home run hitter hitting a stationary ball. How far do you think it will go? Will it go more than 400 ft.? Probably not. While the kinetic energy transferred from the bat to the ball accounts for some energy of the ball, it does not account for all. Where is the mysterious energy coming from?
The answer is conservation of momentum.
I just said momentum is conserved but how do I know that? I know that because of Newton's 2nd law: F=ma (Force equals mass times acceleration)
Conservation of momentum means that the harder you throw you, the harder the ball will bounce back at you. That is the reason it is easier to hit a home run on a fast ball than a curveball.
Conservation of momentum also means that the bat can transfer some of its momentum to the ball. This is why it is better to use a heavier bat if you swing just as fast. The momentum is the product of the mass and velocity, so to make it easier to understand; a heavier bat swung at the same speed as a lighter bat will have more momentum.