No but you can have terrors or anxiety over something.
Explanation:
act as reservoirs for plasma and other substances including cells that have leaked from the vascular system and transport lymph fluid back from the tissues to the circulatory system.
Convenient health care clinic because insurance will cover it depending on who has your insurance.
Antibiotic resistance is such a big, big deal. In fact, the risk of antibiotic resistance is very scary to think about. When we abuse the use of antibiotic for things that aren't really needed to have an antibiotic for or if we don't use them as prescribed or we don't finish the antibiotic, we run this risk of the bacteria becoming resistant. Bacteria are smart. They adapt and overcome, basically like "survival of the fittest".
If we have more or ALL bacteria resistance to antibiotics we start being unable to control bacteria; which can lead to a major epidemic of serious bacteria killing millions of people.
An example is MRSA. MRSA is already a start of an antibiotic resistant bacteria. Now, we typically treat MRSA with Bactrim, Vancomycin, Zosyn. There aren't many but now because the bacteria will adapt and overcome, there is something now called VRSA; which is Vancomycin resistant staph meaning the most potent drug that helps treat MRSA is now resistant. MRSA can kill people without problem.
It's so scary to think about!
Social medicine is a field of medicine that studies the impact of the collective
behavior of organized society on individuals and concentrate on the social, cultural, and economic impact of medical phenomena.
The rapid industrialization and urbanization at the turn of the 19th century led to the birth of social medicine. Many social problems erased in Europe, including increased low-wage workers, poor working conditions, lack of housing and sanitation facility. Diseases and deteriorating health conditions among industrial workers and in the low-income population were also serious. All these events led to the idea to define and analyze the r<span>elationships among medical issues, social factors and public affairs. These were systematically integrated into the framework of social medicine.</span>