I believe it is option D Sympathetic Nervous System.
Head injury, as your head is your skull, damaging your skull is very serious as your brain is located there and damaging your brain could probably kill or limit some abilities
Answer: Acquiring top talent and placing highly-qualified candidates into the right positions in your organization is already hard enough, but what happens when your business needs to do just that in the middle of a skilled labour shortage?
In fact, that's the challenge most organizations throughout the world are experiencing today.
Some 83 percent of businesses are struggling to find workers with the right skillsets, according to the Society for Human Resource Management. Meanwhile, a report by American Action Forum found employers in nearly every US state will face significant shortages in qualified workers by 2029.
The concern with a workforce skills shortage is something that is worrying businesses all over the world, and for good reason. Companies who aren't able to fill positions with skilled workers will be left with stretched resources that result in damaging implications for both the short-term and long-term outlook of the business.
Did you know, however, there are ways to address a skills shortage in your industry?
In this blog, HCMWorks has listed five ways that you can achieve your workforce targets even when there's a shortage in skilled workers in your industry.
Exploring Your Contingent Workforce Ecosystem
Explanation: Was this helpful?
Answer: The orientation of the muscles in the abdominal wall is important to enclose and protect abdominal contents.
Explanation: The anterolateral musculoaponeurotic walls are suspended between and supported by two bony rings; thoracic skeleton superiorly and pelvic girdle inferiorly, which are linked by a semirigid lumbar vertebral column in the posterior abdominal wall. This orientation enables the abdomen to enclose and protect abdominal contents while providing the flexibility required by posture, locomotion and respiration.