Answer:
D
Explanation:
Medicare Part D, the prescription drug benefit, is the part of Medicare that covers most outpatient prescription drugs.
Serum lactate measurement may help to determine the severity of sepsis and is used to monitor therapeutic response.
Answer:
A. A pharmacy technician asks if a patient prefers a generic or trade-name drug.
C. A doctor meets with a patient who has a rare disease to talk about drug research.
D. A pharmacist talks with a patient who then decides not to take cold medicine.
Explanation:
I calculated it logically
Answer:
The subjective symptoms that have led Jessica and Mike to presume she is pregnant are:
The missing of her period.
Clothes feeling tighter.
Breast tenderness.
Being nauseous in the morning.
Eating all the time.
Frequently going to the bathroom.
Explanation:
Amenorrhea, weight gaining, breast tenderness, morning sickness, increase in appetite and an increase in urinary frequency are subjective symptoms of pregnancy. The reason for this is that they are only noticeable by the person that experiences them or by someone that is keeping a close look at that person, like Jessica's husband. Besides, the symptoms mentioned above are subjective because there can be other things that cause them, such as premenstrual symptoms.
I haven’t seen the video so I can’t answer the first one
#2: Everyone’s body has different amounts of chemicals and nutrients and they’re different weights, so a customized prescription can be used to work best for that patient specifically.
#3: They might not want to because all those factors that are taken into account about the patient can change. Weight can go up or down, or they might not have eaten anything the day they measured the patient’s nutrition, and depending on how long the prescription lasts, taking something that’s for those specific numbers over a long period of time can be dangerous if the patient changes anything about their diet or exercise or weight or anything like that.