The NP should change the medication regimen for SABA administration as needed and leukotriene modifier administration once daily.
This must be done because the old medication regiment causes the child to have systemic side effects. When this happens, the administration of a leukotriene modifier is ideal to control these effects and give more comfort to the child.
It is important to emphasize that:
- Administration of SABA will only be necessary in cases of severe asthma attacks.
In addition, the child's growth may occur at a normal acceleration, preventing the child from having developmental problems, but allowing the asthma to be controlled.
You can get more information about asthma at the link below:
brainly.com/question/4917841?referrer=searchResults
Answer:
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The action the nurse should include in the client's plan of care who is receiving tamoxifen (nolvadex) for the treatment of breast cancer is to help the client cope with hot flashes
Tamoxifen, a selective estrogen receptor modulator, is a form of hormonal therapy (SERM). The medication binds to breast cancer cells' hormone receptors (specific proteins). Once the drug is within the cells, it prevents cancer from getting access to the hormones it needs to proliferate and develop.
Tamoxifen prevents estrogen from binding to the receptor, which prevents the cancer cell from receiving signals from estrogen that would otherwise cause it to grow and reproduce. Hot flashes, exhaustion, an elevated risk of blood clots, and endometrial cancer are some of the side effects that this drug may cause.
To learn more about tamoxifen and hot flashes here,
brainly.com/question/13142326
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Answer: That sounds great!
Explanation: your body needs sleep to restore the days information that you learnt and to 're -new' your brain and hormones etc. What you said is correct
Hope this helped x