Mr. Roberts' Open Enrollment Period for institutionalized individuals will remain for two more months after he is discharged from the Resthaven skilled nursing facility.
Explanation:
According to the Medicare Advantage Plans, a person can avail Open Enrollment Period for institutionalized individuals (OEPI).
An individual, who moves to an institutional medical care unit, resides and moves out of the institution once his/her medical condition has improved. He/she can still avail the OEPI for two more months from the date of discharge from the institution.
There are also options according to the criteria met under the Special Enrollment Period for institutionalized individuals.
Mr. Roberts can either switch back to his original medicare plan or avail the two months period of OEPI.
Answer:
A. Targeted exercise should improve the performance of a certain task. Repetition of specific exercises will help improve the given task.
Explanation:
The principle of specificity basically states that to be good at a certain task or skill, you need to perform that task or skill. If you want to improve the performance of a certain task, you need to do exercises that develop the skills that are specific to the task.
A little confusing, but to make it even simpler, you know the saying "practice makes perfect". In order to master the skill, it needs to be done repetitively. In the context of exercising or training, you need to do exercises that will develop your body to do the skill you want to achieve.
A swimmer for example, will not improve in swimming, if he or she does not swim. They can only get better if their training is swimming.
Have the pt complete paperwork at each office visit.
Answer:The nurse should include in teaching plan the physiologic effect of a spontaneous pneumothorax, air will move from the lung into the pleural space. In addition primary spontaneous pneumothorax is likely due to the formation of small sacs of air (blebs) in lung tissue that rupture, causing air to leak into the pleural space.
Oddly enough, type O blood in the U.S. is not by itself the rarest blood type. Actually O+ is one of the most common. But because O is the recessive of the A-B-O gene group, and also Rh- is recessive in it's gene, the combination makes it extremely rare. Roughly 85% if people have the Rh+ allele, and roughly 1/3 people are O, but those are only O+.
The rarest is actually AB-, because 3% or less are this type. O- people are around 5% of population.
However because O- blood is the "universal donor" (will not cause immune reactions with any other blood type when transfused in) for hospitals and blood banks, it is always in short supply.