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masha68 [24]
3 years ago
14

Explain the difference between physical addiction and psychological addiction.

Health
1 answer:
timofeeve [1]3 years ago
7 0
The difference between physical dependence versus psychological dependence is physical dependence affects your body and psychological dependence affects your behavior.
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To warm up before a run, David begins by completing quad and hurdler's stretches. Which of these accurately evaluates his choice
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A nurse in the antepartum clinic is assessing a client's adaptation to pregnancy. The client states that she is, "happy one minu
jasenka [17]

Answer:

The nurse should interpret the client's statement as an indication of: c) Intense hormonal changes may be responsible for mood changes that occur during pregnancy.

Explanation:

Pregnancy is a complicated state for women for different reasons, among them we have the hormonal changes which is responsble for the umpredictable mood changes. There for it is also well known that women experiment mood changes. Not only hormons are involved in this process, but also psychological changes are playing an importan role in how a pregnant women is going to be like, for there are physical and emotional changes.

It is not a matter of emotional lability, because the are real factors that can be responsable for the mood changes.

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3 years ago
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aliya0001 [1]

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6 0
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How does returning leaked fluid from the blood help maintain homeostasis?<br> SUPER EASY AND URGENT!
Scorpion4ik [409]

The leaked fluid is being absorbed by pathogens and dead cells, so when the fluid is returned to the blood, the body can stabilize its internal conditions (homeostasis.)

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3 years ago
Explain the role of health education to reduce the prevalence of malnutntion,
snow_lady [41]

Answer:

The paradigmatic shift in the past decade in our understanding of the role of health and nutrition in school-age children has fundamental implications for the design of effective programs. Improving the health and nutrition of schoolchildren through school-based programs is not a new concept. School health programs are ubiquitous in high-income countries and most middle-income countries. In low-income countries, these programs were a common feature of early, particularly colonial, education systems, where they could be characterized as heavily focused on clinical diagnosis and treatment and on elite schools in urban centers. This situation is changing as new policies and partnerships are being formulated to help ensure that programs focus on promoting health and improving the educational outcomes of children, as well as being socially progressive and specifically targeting the poor, girls, and other disadvantaged children. This evolution reflects five key changes in our understanding of the role of these programs in child development.

First, ensuring good health at school age requires a life cycle approach to intervention, starting in utero and continuing throughout child development. In programmatic terms this requirement implies a sequence of programs to promote maternal and reproductive health, management of childhood illness, and early childhood care and development. Promoting good health and nutrition before and during school age is essential to effective growth and development.

Second, operations research shows that the preexisting infrastructure of the educational system can often offer a more cost-effective route for delivery of simple health interventions and health promotion than can the health system. Low-income countries typically have more teachers than nurses and more schools than clinics, often by an order of magnitude.

Third, empirical evidence shows that good health and nutrition are prerequisites for effective learning. This finding is not simply the utopian aspiration for children to have healthy bodies and healthy minds, but also the demonstration of a systemic link between specific physical insults and specific cognitive and learning deficits, grounded in a new multisectoral approach to research involving public health and epidemiology, as well as cognitive and educational psychology.

Fourth, the provision of quality schools, textbooks, and teachers can result in effective education only if the child is present, ready, and able to learn. This perception has additional political momentum as countries and agencies seek to achieve Education for All (EFA) by 2015 and address the Millennium Development Goals of universal basic education and gender equality in education access. If every girl and boy is to be able to complete a basic education of good quality, then ensuring that the poorest children, who suffer the most malnutrition and ill health, are able to attend and stay in school and to learn while there is essential.

Finally, education, including education that promotes positive health behaviors, contributes to the prevention of HIV/AIDS—the greatest challenge for generations to come. School health and nutrition programs that help children complete their education and develop knowledge, practices, and behaviors that protect them from HIV infection as they mature have been described as a "social vaccine" against the disease.

Because of the success of child survival programs, the number of children reaching school age (defined as 5 to 14 years of age) is increasing and is estimated to be 1.2 billion children, with 88 percent living in less developed countries (U.S. Census Bureau 2002). As figure 58.1 illustrates, the pattern of disease is age specific. A large body of evidence shows that these conditions affect cognition, learning, and educational achievement (see Jukes, Drake, and Bundy forthcoming; Pollitt 1990 for reviews of this extensive literature).

Explanation:

8 0
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