Answer:
"I will chew my tablets."
"I will include licorice in my diet."
The patient statements regarding chewing the tablets and including licorice in the diet require additional education. The tablets should be swallowed whole and the patient should avoid, not include, licorice in the diet. The patient statements regarding eating a banana each day (a source of potassium), taking the medication with water (a full glass is recommended), and notifying the healthcare provider if constipation occurs (a clinical manifestation associated with hypokalemia) indicate correct understanding.
Explanation:
For sensory information to be relayed the nerve cells should have an axon.
<u>Explanation</u>:
- Nerve cells or neurons play a critical role in transmitting signals from various sense organs of the body to the spinal cord where it is processed.
- Neurons have different parts - the dendrites which are tiny branches that receive incoming signals from the body, the nucleus, and the axon.
- The axon is a long fiber that is covered by a protective layer called myelin sheath. It is this structure of the nerve cell or neuron that helps transmit signals to the Central Nervous System of which the spinal cord is a part.
Answer:
Perhaps general medical knowledge (in depth maybe)?
Explanation:
But really in a PowerPoint presentation you can write about anything so I suggest you think about which part of medicine you want to focus on (personal view but I hope it might help somehow).
Answer: 24 months
Explanation:
According to John Bowlby's Attachment Theory, infants go through 4 stages of attachment which are the Pre-attachment phase, Attachment-in-making phase, Clear-cut attachment phase, and Formations of reciprocal relationships phase.
Anna is in the <em>Formations of reciprocal relationships</em> phase which kicks in at around 24 months. At this stage, infants begin to take into account the feelings of others before acting. They are able to understand what refusal means and so can try to hide things they think are wrong so as not to get into trouble.