<span>Which is the MOST common nutrient deficiency in the world?
<span>-iron</span></span>
The nurse has provided discharge instructions to a client who received a prescription for a walker. The nurse determines that the teaching has been effective when the client moves the walker no more than 12 inches in front of the client during use.
You can keep your weight-bearing restrictions while walking by using a walker to help with stability and support. You might experience leg weakness after an illness or injury that necessitates a lengthy period of bed rest and recovery. After a period of bed rest, your equilibrium may also be impacted.
Be careful not to slouch or lean forward. Look forward rather than down when using a walker. Three to four feet in advance of your rolling walker, locate the floor. When both feet are on the ground, you should only move your walker. During use, keep the walker no further than 12 inches in front of the client.
Learn more about how to use a walker properly here;
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HIPAA refers to the <span>Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996. (You can give some background information about the act).
Now, to the main question. T</span><span>he steps a medical assistant can take to ensure HIPPA compliance in handling patient information are outlined as follows
1. Protected Health Information (PHI) should be kept secure and private (either on pass-worded computers or paper files and charts always safely locked up when not in use).
2. Keep strictly to the office policy, and ensure full implementation of laod down procedures. Refresher trainings may also be helpful.
3. Patients should be informed of their rights when their information is being taken and the medical assistant should support those rights.
4. D</span><span>on’t volunteer patient's information to outside companies/entities or allow them access to it, except with the patient's consent.
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The nurse is caring for a patient receiving cyclophosphamide (cytoxan). what is the priority nursing action for this patient?
Assess for signs of hematuria, urinary frequency, or dysuria