Answer:
The best answer to the question: You should suspect:___, would be, A: moderate dehydration.
Explanation:
This is a 6-month old baby who has been with diarrhea and vomiting for two days. He presents a lessened level of activity, a heart rate of 140 bpm and whose anterior fontanelle appears shrunken due to the loss of water and electrolytes. However, there are also good news: the baby has not had either emesis, or diarrheic episodes for at least 12 hours.
Taking these symptoms into consideration we can say that the child has moderate, and not severe dehydration, or even worse, hypovolemic shock, because his heart rate, which would be one of the most clear indications of severe dehydration, is still within the normal ranges for a child of that age (80 to 160 bpm for children between 2 and 11 months). Also, the child has reduced levels of activity, but there is still presence of activity and he is still concious. Finally, the fontanelle´s situation, although worrisome, is indicative that the volumes in the child are low, but can be brought back up easily enough since he has not presented another episode in 12 hours.
Answer:
Medical confidentiality is a set of rules that limits access to information discussed between a person and their healthcare practitioners. With only a few exceptions, anything you discuss with your doctor must, by law, be kept private between the two of you and the organisation they work for.
physical, mental, social, environmental
Answer:
Chest Pass
A chest pass is the most basic way to move the basketball from one player to another. If you have an open teammate and there's little or no chance that an opponent will steal the ball, the chest pass should work well. Hold the ball with both hands and pushing hard and outward with your thumbs. Aim for the teammate's chest.
Bounce Pass
The bounce pass often is just as accurate as a chest pass and harder to defend. Hold the ball at chest level and bounce it off the floor halfway between yourself and your teammate. The defense may be anticipating a chest pass and often might not be ready for a ball that bounces hard and comes in from a low angle.
Baseball Pass
The baseball pass is a type to use when you have the ball in the back court -- often after a steal -- and your teammate is breaking to the basket. Take the ball and bring it overhead and throw a hard, direct pass to your teammate. The pass should lead your teammate and give him a chance to catch the ball at full speed and then accelerate toward the basket.
Outlet Pass
Defensive rebounders often use the outlet pass. After getting a rebound off the defensive boards, a power forward or the center will take one step away from the basket and throw the ball toward the sideline, where a guard catches it and starts the attack. This pass often is a two-hand overhead pass or as a bounce pass. Hall of Famers Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain and Wes Unseld excelled at making this pass.
No-Look Pass
The no-look pass is designed to confuse the defense. A point guard leading a fast break can use this pass with success. It has a high degree of difficulty because the passer looks in a different direction than the direction in which the ball will be going. It is very easy to throw this ball away for a turnover, but when the play works, it usually leads to an uncontested layup or a dunk. Magic Johnson made this pass one of his signature moves during his career, and point guards have been using this move since the 1980s.