Answer:
Delegatee Responsibilities
Everyone is responsible for the well-being of patients. While the nurse is ultimately accountable for the overall care provided to a patient, the delegatee shares the responsibility for the patient and is fully responsible for the delegated activity, skill or procedure
Answer:
So, it depends on how serious their wound is. It's like a scale of one to ten, if it's a one being not serious, then you won't get admitted soon. But if it's a ten, being incredibly serious, then you'll get admitted sooner. Their method is known as Triage. Same thing goes with the person's illness.
I hope I answered your question... Let me know if you need help with anything else.
Answer:
True
Explanation:
because Ganglia were the evolutionary precursor to the centralized concentration of neurons that we now call a brain.
OSHA occupational safety and health administration
CDC Center for disease control
CLIA ..... I am unsure what this stands for.
Immunity... when you’re body protects you from a infection or disease. Natural immunity is when you get sick and recover. Your body makes T cells so If you are exposed to the infection again the T cell remember and fight the infection. Herd immunity is when most people in the community has had the virus or infection. Keeps the infection from spreading in that area because most people are already immune to it.
Behaviors that promote health and wellness. Eating healthy, not smoking, exercising.
Eating healthy can prevent disease. Not eating processed foods that are high in fat, fried foods lower risk of heart attack, cancer, ect.
Answer:
The correct answer is A.
Explanation:
B-lympocytes participate in antibody-mediated immunity (also called humoral immunity)- They activate in the lymph nodes and/or in lymphatic organs when they are exposed to an antigen.
Also T-lymphocytes participate in cell-mediated immunity, they release different types of cytokines when they are exposed to an antigen. Macrophages and natural killer cells also participate in this type of immunity.