Answer:
Cholesterol and other fats are carried in your bloodstream as spherical particles called lipoproteins
Well withdrawal just doesn't make sense.
Contraptions are cool mechanical devices.
Experience has to be the answer. It also makes sense because the sentence is saying some trait this person lacks caused him to do a bad thing. not having experience is a bad thing
Chronic dehydration and malnutrition can drastically affect other vital organs, including the heart, liver, and kidneys. In fact, many individuals who struggle with anorexia may present with heart failure or cardiovascular complications; however, anorexia is usually the underlying cause.
Other physical side effects include bone and muscle loss, which results when the body is not receiving adequate nutrition to sustain the body. Many individuals who struggle with anorexia have some form of osteopenia or osteoporosis, creating an increased risk of breaks and fractures.
Yet other long-term effects for women include loss of normal menstruation, difficulties conceiving, infertility and more. A woman with anorexia may struggle for a prolonged period of time with getting pregnant and seek out infertility treatments without addressing the underlying cause of the eating disorder.
Mark Brainliest please
Answer :
How to Develop Your Healthcare Career: A Guide to Employability and Professional Development, 21, 2016
In the previous chapter, we examined some definitions of the concept of employability, which, in the words of Mantz Yorke (2004), consists of ‘a set of achievements–skills, understandings and personal attributes–that make graduates more likely to gain employment and be successful in their chosen occupations, hence benefitting themselves, the workforce, the community and the economy’. Already we can see that the idea of employability is a complex one, embracing many preoccupations that include an individual’s values and personal motivations. We will now consider the similarly complex idea of ‘career’: What is meant by it (both in general and in the context of the healthcare professional)? We will suggest some of the external influences that can affect your own choices (some of which we have already explored in Chapter 1) and also put forward some tools with which to examine your idea of a career. We will also examine common perspectives that can help early career professionals to understand and better manage their career, considering some of the key factors that influence career choices, and pointing out ways in which harnessing self‐awareness can help you to make the right decisions. Throughout the chapter ‘practitioner’s perspective’will be offered, drawing examples from my experience in careers guidance. For some people, a career is often seen in hindsight, particularly when a break or change has required them to reflect on where they want to go next:‘How did I get here and what do I do now?’That you are reading this book suggests that this is not the case for you, because you are probably looking ahead with a view to understanding where your career might now take you within your chosen health profession.
I believe you should take a year off and do every prereq you can get at a local college or university. a way to check that would be to go on a computer and pull up the local college, and the college you set your mind to long term. so for instance LTC (long term college) may have a prereq Bio 213 and maybe you LC (local college) has a Bio 217. you would call the LTC and say hey, does your Bio 213 line up with LC Bio 217. Most of the time they will say yes. It saves a LOT of money.