Homeostasis is maintained by sweating because it helps the human body cool down when it is warmer than its normal healthy temperature. The water sweating puts on the skin absorbs a large amount of heat from the body as it evaporates. Hope this helps.
A) Feet shoulder width apart, heels on the ground, back straight as you lower your body
Answer:
The information must include:
1. whether the exposed worker was recommended with the hepatitis B vaccination
2. whether or not the vaccination was received by the worker
3. whether the worker was informed by the healthcare provider of the evaluation results, including other medical conditions that arose from the exposure to blood or OPIM (other potentially-infectious materials), for this requires treatment or further evaluation.
Explanation:
The question above is related to "Bloodborne Pathogen Exposure Incidents." Whenever workers in the healthcare industry are exposed to any bloodborne pathogen (like hepatitis), <u>they must report about the incident.</u> This will prevent the worker from contracting the disease and will also prevent him from infecting others.
The worker will then undergo a medical diagnosis to address possible infection. Once the test results are in, they have to know about the results as well. A healthcare professional will evaluate the report through a written opinion within 15 days and it will include the following information above.
Other information, other than those mentioned, will not be included in the written opinion.
Answer:
To simplify greatly, we have gone from care to cure.
Cure: Doctors can now cure many things that they could not cure before. New cures and treatments continue to be discovered and used; specialists get more and more specialized and expert. Lewis Thomas (born 1913) wrote somewhere that when he was in medical school they were big on diagnosis because there were four things they could cure and they didn’t want to miss any of them.
Care: Of course many many doctors care a lot about their patients. But the system we have in place now makes it much harder for them to show this. Partly, this is a direct result of the increased expertise - it is completely impossible for anyone to be expert in all fields of medicine. But it’s also due to the fact that internists/GPs are now incredibly pressed for time. They also fear lawsuits. And the notion that you have one doctor - usually for many years or even decades - is gone because you have to go to one that takes your insurance and that changes when you change jobs. House calls are impossible because of both the increase in equipment and the time pressure.
Explanation: