1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
muminat
3 years ago
7

What is the most likely cause of large outbreaks of food poisoning?

Medicine
1 answer:
Sergeeva-Olga [200]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:B

Explanation:

You might be interested in
The blood flow through the kidney is special because
dem82 [27]

Answer: a. Its first capillary beds drain into arterioles.

Explanation:

The kidneys are the two filtering units in the bodies. Inside each kidney their is a filteration unit called as glomerulus. This includes a group of blood vessels called as capillaries. The blood enters the capillaries by afferent arterioles and leaves by the virtue of efferent arterioles.

6 0
3 years ago
2) What is nutrition? Write<br> two diseases caused by it.<br> any
kumpel [21]

Answer:

Okay

Nutrition is the process of providing or obtaining the food necessary for health and growth.

Nutritional disease, any of the nutrient-related diseases and conditions that cause illness in humans. They may include deficiencies or excesses in the diet, obesity and eating disorders, and chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease, hypertension, cancer, and diabetes mellitus.

Explanation:

7 0
2 years ago
which of the following is not a federal law affecting health insurance, health benefits plans, or hmos? a. erisa b. cobra c. csn
Jet001 [13]

CSNY is the following is not a federal law affecting health insurance , health benefits plans or hmos .

<h3>What is meant by  Health insurance?</h3>

A corporation and a customer enter into a contract for health insurance. In exchange for the payment of a monthly premium, the corporation offers to cover all or part of the insured person's medical expenses. In exchange for a monthly premium payment, health insurance covers the majority of the insured person's medical, surgical, and preventative care costs.

In general, the insured has lesser out-of-pocket expenses the larger the monthly payment is.

There are deductibles and co-pays in almost all insurance plans, but these out-of-pocket costs are now limited by federal law.

To learn more about health insurance refer to:

brainly.com/question/1941778

#SPJ4

8 0
1 year ago
6. The mother of a 10-year-old child comes running into the office with her son. He is bleeding profusely from a gash in his lef
Lina20 [59]

Answer:

Explanation:

First of all make child and Mother calm down

See how much blood loss is there

Is any Glass inserted in arm or any other part of body

Clean the wound and give painkillers

4 0
3 years ago
A healthy 70-year-old woman, admitted to the hospital for a hip replacement surgery, develops an infection after the surgery and
kykrilka [37]

Answer:

Explanation:

ames Brantner had always been scrupulous about maintaining his health. He sees his primary care doctor annually, avoids sweets and developed a habit of walking 3.5 miles every other day near his home just outside Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

So when a routine colonoscopy in 2017 showed evidence of cancer, Brantner, then 76, was stunned. He’d need 12 radiation treatments, followed by surgery to reconstruct his colon. His physician recommended Johns Hopkins Hospital’s colorectal surgeon Susan Gearhart.

“The surgery [which took place last December] was quite extensive,” says Brantner, a retired planning officer for the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. “Dr. Gearhart was very upfront with me—and compassionate.” He recalls little about his two days in the intensive care unit, but all went well during the surgery and hospital stay. And, though he’s lost 30 pounds and is not yet able to walk long distances, Brantner says he’s getting his appetite back and feels stronger every day.

More than a third of all surgeries in U.S. hospitals—inpatient and outpatient procedures combined—are now performed on people age 65 and over, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That number, 38 percent, is expected to increase: By 2030, studies predict there will be some 84 million adults in this age group, many of whom will likely need surgery.

Last year, across all five adult Johns Hopkins medical centers, 36 percent of surgeries—48,359—took place in the 65-plus population.

Now, Johns Hopkins Bayview—a longtime hub for comprehensive health care of older adults—is poised to become a “center of excellence” in geriatric surgery. This means the American College of Surgeons will likely recognize Hopkins Bayview as offering a high concentration of expertise and resources devoted to caring for older-adult patients in need of surgery, leading to the best possible outcomes. Hopkins Bayview is one of eight hospitals expecting to merit this distinction, which also recognizes extensive research. (The others, which include community hospitals, veterans’ hospitals and academic centers, are Denver Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Kaiser Permanente Fresno, New York University Winthrop Hospital, University of Alabama, University of Connecticut, University of Rochester, and University Hospital—Rutgers’s—in Newark, New Jersey.)

Gearhart is among the leaders championing the program. Others include Perry Colvin, medical director for Peri-Operative Medicine Services; and Thomas Magnuson, Hopkins Bayview’s chairman of surgery, as well as geriatric nurse practitioners JoAnn Coleman, Jane Marks and Virginia Inez Wendel.

Shifting Perceptions of Aging

While advances in technology and medicine make it easier for people to live longer, healthier lives, no one is sure how factors such as chronological age and chronic disease affect geriatric surgical outcomes.

Consider Podge Reed. In 2011, he was 70 years old, trim and still working as chairman of the board of an oil production company. He played golf regularly and was an avid gardener. Then, during an annual physical, he learned that his lungs were impaired. He’d acknowledged having some recent shortness-of-breath episodes and was diagnosed with lung disease of unknown origin. Within a few months, Reed was placed on a transplant waiting list for a new set of lungs.

Four days after being placed on the transplant waiting list, Reed received a call from the hospital: A 41-year-old organ donor had just died, and the victim’s lungs appeared to be suitable for Reed in blood type and body size. The transplant went well, and Reed remained in the hospital for 56 days—longer than usual for most lung transplant patients because of a lung infection.

6 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • Which of the following is NOT part of a virus structure?
    12·2 answers
  • 375mg of a drug is ordered. the available tablets are 0.25g. how many tablets should be given to the patient?
    8·2 answers
  • Why does the US healthcare system use the metric system more often than the American system of measurement?
    5·1 answer
  • • Antimicrobial agents usually work best at high temperatures and high pH levels.
    15·1 answer
  • In the waiting room of an emergency room, a patient has a facial expression that is twisted in agony and is hunching
    6·2 answers
  • Sex or gender 1.ito ay pamana sa magulang simula pa sakanilang pagsilang<br>Help po please❤️❤️​
    6·1 answer
  • Do you think it is ok to use a Donor’s Egg or Sperm to Conceive a Child? Explain why or why not.
    6·1 answer
  • the primary health care provider prescribes daily fasting blood glucose levels for a client with diabetes mellitus. which is the
    9·1 answer
  • Rx: 250ml of 30% nacl soln. your pharmacy stocks 22% and 40% nacl soln. how may ml of 22% nacl soln would you need to formulate
    15·1 answer
  • the fact that many clinicians view alcoholism as a disease is consistent with the dsm-5's assumption that classification should
    15·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!