-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
These injuries are called concussions. A common injury that results as a blow to the head, a lot of times during sport, fights, or accidents. A sudden blow to the head causes shaking of the brain inside the skull causes acute symptoms, not usually dangerous, unless they are repeated, or it is super severe. It is usually met with headaches and unconsciousness, and is usually treated with rest.
Remember though that there are other injuries that could happen, which could cause severe bleeding of the brain, and so one should not be conservative when seeking treatment.
The Red Cross relies on its extensive chapter network as
its first level of response to disasters. This backbone of more than 800 chapters allows the Red Cross to respond quickly to disasters anywhere in the country, with a cadre of locally trained volunteers, also, the Red Cross has a large and strong partnership with several wealthy organizations who make the donation when needed.
It should also be noted that the Red Cross has people, systems and plans in place to respond to disasters.
Answer:
Designate a driver who is not drinking
Explanation: