For starters, you must live up to what you fight for, so adopting a healthy lifestyle is the first obvious step. Also, considering the absurdly broad scope of the "health" definition (from the WHO, for example), you would have to decide on a specific focus. (i.e. alternative medicine? Nutrition and fitness? Access to global healthcare? and so on).
Among the career paths you could pick, there are:
*Becoming a health educator, by writing or broadcasting TV/ Youtube shows on wiser health choices;
*Visiting countries where people lack basic resources in nutrition and diet, urban sanitary infrastructure, and/or healthcare advances (like vaccines); or perhaps other places where there has been a rise of non-trasmissive chronic diseases (e.g. obesity, hypertension, diabetes). The purpose is really to educate people on ways to overcome the causes and to bring awareness to the problems.
*And finally, you can be a personal trainer/dieter to individuals or groups.
I hope this helps!
Answer:
Replication
Explanation:
Replicating a study means that other researchers are able to replicate the procedure of a published study and find similar or different results. Replication is very important in science. It can act as a filter for the community itself, as a researcher's field colleagues can ascertain whether the effect reported in a study is reproducible, generalizable, or limited. Based on this, we can conclude that if Dr. Ambra is skeptical about the results of a sleep deprivation survey, the best she can do is to replicate the research and prove whether the results are reliable or not.
This is because infants' neck muscles aren't well developed and provide little support for their heads.