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Sonbull [250]
3 years ago
8

Please explain why you are interested in your chosen career field (to work in the medical field)

Medicine
2 answers:
choli [55]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

because l like to help people

ioda3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

I want to help my society and be able to know more about myself

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Hazards in a health care setting that would require personal protective equipment (ppe) include
trasher [3.6K]

Answer:

Personal protective equipment may include items such as gloves, safety glasses and shoes, earplugs or muffs, hard hats, respirators, or coveralls, vests and full body suits.

4 0
2 years ago
What do you do if a doctor won't let you take your cast off and it hurts badly?
Lilit [14]

Answer:

There are many reasons why it may be tempting for you to take your cast off. However, this job should only ever fall to your doctor or specialist. If you remove your cast on your own, or if you make any adjustments, you will run the risk of causing your leg or arm further damage

Explanation:

Plaster casts can be removed in a few steps.

1.Fill the bucket with warm water, deep enough to fully submerge the cast. Add one tablespoon of vinegar to the water to break down the plaster material.

2.Soak the cast until the plaster begins to loosen. ...

3.Wash your skin with soap and water when the cast is removed.

7 0
2 years ago
3. Describe the contributions and limitations of the information processing approach
natima [27]

Answer:

The development of Memory and thought ( input processor and storage then output information)

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
Which bloodborne pathogen affects the liver
ikadub [295]

Answer:

The Hepatitis B virus

Explanation:

The Hepatitis B virus is known as a bloodborne virus, because it is transmitted from one person to another via blood or fluids contaminated with blood. The virus attacks the liver/organ. It can cause scarring of the liver, liver cancer, liver failure, and death.

4 0
3 years ago
True or False
guapka [62]

Answer: I think it means true.

Explanation:

"15 Overview of Circulation

The circulatory system transports and distributes essential substances to tissues and removes metabolic byproducts. This system also participates in homeostatic mechanisms such as regulation of body temperature, maintenance of fluid balance, and adjustment of O2 and nutrient supply under various physiological states. The cardiovascular system that accomplishes these tasks is composed of a pump (the heart), a series of distributing and collecting tubes (blood vessels), and an extensive system of thin vessels (capillaries) that permit rapid exchange between the tissues and vascular channels. Blood vessels throughout the body are filled with a heterogeneous fluid (blood) that is essential for the transport processes performed by the heart and blood vessels. This chapter is a general, functional overview of the heart and blood vessels, whose functions are analyzed in much greater detail in subsequent chapters.

THE HEART

The heart consists of two pumps in series: one pump propels blood through the lungs for exchange of O2 and CO2 (the pulmonary circulation) and the other pump propels blood to all other tissues of the body (the systemic circulation). Flow of blood through the heart is one way (unidirectional). Unidirectional flow through the heart is achieved by the appropriate arrangement of flap valves. Although cardiac output is intermittent, continuous flow to body tissues (periphery) occurs by distention of the aorta and its branches during ventricular contraction (systole) and by elastic recoil of the walls of the large arteries with forward propulsion of the blood during ventricular relaxation (diastole).

THE CARDIOVASCULAR CIRCUIT

In the normal intact circulation the total volume of blood is constant, and an increase in the volume of blood in one area must be accompanied by a decrease in another. However, the distribution of blood circulating to the different regions of the body is determined by the output of the left ventricle and by the contractile state of the resistance vessels (arterioles) of these regions. The circulatory system is composed of conduits arranged in series and in parallel (Fig. 15-1). This arrangement, which is discussed in subsequent chapters, has important implications in terms of resistance, flow, and pressure in blood vessels.

Blood entering the right ventricle via the right atrium is pumped through the pulmonary arterial system at a mean pressure about one seventh that in the systemic arteries. The blood then passes through the lung capillaries, where CO2 in the blood is released and O2 is taken up. The O2-rich blood returns via the pulmonary veins to the left atrium, where it is pumped from the ventricle to the periphery, thus completing the cycle.

BLOOD VESSELS

Blood moves rapidly through the aorta and its arterial branches. These branches narrow and their walls become thinner as they approach the periphery. They also change historically. The aorta is a predominantly elastic structure, but the peripheral arteries become more muscular until at the arterioles, the muscular layer predominates (Fig. 15-2).

In the large arteries, frictional resistance is relatively small and pressures are only slightly less than in the aorta. The small arteries, on the other hand, offer moderate resistance to blood flow. This resistance reaches a maximal level in the arterioles, which are sometimes referred to as the stopcocks of the vascular system. Hence, the pressure drop is greatest across the terminal segment of the small arteries and the arterioles (Fig. 15-3). Adjustment in the degree of contraction of the circular muscle of these small vessels permits regulation of tissue blood flow and aids in the control of arterial blood pressure.

In addition to the reduction in pressure along the arterioles, there is a change from pulsate to steady blood flow (Fig. 15-3). Pulsate arterial blood flow, caused by the intermittent ejection of blood from the heart, is damped at the capillary level by a combination of two factors: divisibility of the large arteries and frictional resistance in the small arteries and arterioles."

5 0
3 years ago
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