-Demographic factors such as age, ethnicity, gender, education, marriage status
-Psychosocial factors: beliefs, motivation, attitude
-Patient-prescriber relationship
-Health literacy
-Patient knowledge
-Physical difficulties
-Tobacco or alcohol intake
-Forgetfulness
-History of compliance
-Treatment complexity
-Duration of treatment
-Medication side effects or taste
-Degree of behavioral change required
-Requirements for drug storage
-Lack of accessibility
-Long waiting time
-Difficulty getting prescriptions
-Unhappy clinic visits
-Inability to take time off work
-Cost and income
-Social support
-Disease symptoms
-Severity of the disease
A risk behavior is a behavior that carries some form of risk. In the case of teenagers and health risk this can include habits that can be particularly dangerous toward their and other now and future health. protected sex for example is a risky behavior which could cause STD infections.
Being knowledgeable about risk behaviors is a requirement in order to keep teens safe, and develop solutions to such dangers.
C I think because if it’s not functioning correctly that’s bad for kids health so I would say c but I’m not positive
Well one factor would be that he could get to places faster and more efficiently
Answer:
Rinse the plate next
Explanation:
source: https://www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/portal/fsis/topics/food-safety-education/get-answers/food-safety-fact-sheets/safe-food-handling/cleanliness-helps-prevent-foodborne-illness/ct_index