If there are no answer choices, then here is what I believe needs to be done:
Firstly, clean up the patient and dress them in clean garments as to decontaminate them.
Secondly, the nurse has to look at their chart. Is the patient allergic to anything in the medicine?
If there are no allergies known, then they can either A. Call the doctor to explain the situation and ask what needs to be done, or B. Look on the side affects of the medication. If it reads that in case of vomiting, stop medication immediately, then he/she can assume that the patient's body is not coping well to the medicine. At that point, with qualified expertise, can switch out for a different medicine that aids the client's condition.
Hope this helps. <3
Correct answer
Epilepsy
This is to prevent him from falling in fire in case of attack when cooking in kitchen.
When pressing the carotid artery from the neck the person is
most likely checking for pulse rates. There are two types of pulse rates and
these are called: Resting Heart Rate (RHR) and Maximum Heart Rate (MHR).
Resting Heart Rate (RHR) refers to the ability of the heart to pump blood
efficiently when at rest. This is usually taken early in the morning when the
person has just woken up. It is taken for 3 full minutes and the normal ranges
of RHR should only be between 80-120 beats per minute.
<span>
Maximum Heart Rate (MHR) refers to the maximum capacity of
the heart to pump efficiently. A human heart beat can only perform a maximum of
220 beats per minute. The MHR is taken by deducting your age from the value of
220.</span>
Heyy
This Is Not The Direct Answer But Hope This Is Useful
There Might Be Some Articles Out There About This Topic So You Can Copy And Paste It In A Website Called Quillbot.com It Changes The Structure And Words Of the Sentences But Not The Meaning