I haven’t seen the video so I can’t answer the first one
#2: Everyone’s body has different amounts of chemicals and nutrients and they’re different weights, so a customized prescription can be used to work best for that patient specifically.
#3: They might not want to because all those factors that are taken into account about the patient can change. Weight can go up or down, or they might not have eaten anything the day they measured the patient’s nutrition, and depending on how long the prescription lasts, taking something that’s for those specific numbers over a long period of time can be dangerous if the patient changes anything about their diet or exercise or weight or anything like that.
Answer:
15 percent calories from fat, 55 percent calories from carbohydrate, and 30 percent calories from protein
Explanation:
just past the test
Answer:
4 tablets t.i.d. (Three times a day)
Explanation:
By use of Dimensional Analysis, you can figure this out:
First, find how many mg she will take in a day:

Since she will take 3 equal doses, divide this by 3:

To find the # of tablets per dose, divide dose in mg by mg per tablet:

Since you can't realistically take .995 of a tablet, round up to 4.
Answer:
Example below
Explanation:
Treating type II diabetes with metformin or insulin treats the symptom of high blood glucose but doesn't treat the cause (usually obesity).