UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MARA CAWANGAN PAHANG FACULTY OF SPORTS SCIENCE & RECREATION Subject: ATHLETIC TRAINING (SPS 553) Topic: SPORT FIRST AIDER - HOSPITAL ATTACHMENT REPORT (HOSHAS TEMERLOH) Lecturer: MR. MOHD. ZULKHAIRI BIN MOHD. AZAM. No. Name UiTM ID. 1. 2. 3 MUHAMMAD SANY BIN KASBOLAH 2012324873 4. Group: Bachelor of Sports Science (Hons) SR 223 4A Submission date: TH JUNE 2013 CONTENT No Topics Pages 1 Acknowledgement 3 2 Attachment’s
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Till it´s gone Robert Crumb born in Philadelphia 1943 (73 year)‚ also called R. Crumb‚ has made 1992: short history of America‚ which is a colorful short cartoon about America throughout the past years. The pictures remind me of a song called "Don´t know what you got‚ till it´s gone” because‚ in the comic strip the wonderful nature is destroyed‚ and eventually the people who lived there have planted trees which I think is a sign that when we destroyed nature‚ we realized what we had lost‚ and regretted
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toxins that they produce entering the bloodstream‚ resulting in a coagulation of the blood as the body tries to fight the bacteria. A patient with septicemia tends to look very bad. The condition is marked by confusion‚ chills‚ sweating‚ a very high fever‚ weakness‚ a rash‚ and an elevated heart rate. Respiration is also often rapid‚ and the patient may turn pale as well. If the condition progresses‚ the patient’s blood pressure will drop‚ and the bacteria will start attacking major organs of the body
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Queen Latifah Queen Latifah was born Dana Elaine Owens on March 18‚ 1970‚ in Newark‚ New Jersey. Dana was only 8 years old‚ when her Muslim cousin gave her the nickname Latifah‚ which means delicate and sensitive in Arabic. Queen Latifah was raised in Baptist faith‚ she sung in her church choir‚ played basketball‚ and started rapping in high school. Queen Latifah lost her brother in a motorcycle accident‚ she hit a depression stage afterwards‚ got arrested and charged with possession of a gun and
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[pic] WRITTEN RECORD |Learner name: |Sarah Armstrong | |Qualification: |Level 2 Supporting teaching and learning in schools | |Unit number & title: |Unit 6 Safeguarding the welfare of children and young people | |
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: b. decrease in heart rate Predict Question 2: What effect will increasing the temperature of the Ringer’s solution have on the heart rate of the frog? Your answer : c. increase in heart rate Stop & Think Questions: What effect do you think a fever of 104°F would have on heart rate? You correctly answered: c. increase in heart rate Experiment Data: Solution 23°C Ringer’s 5°C Ringer’s 32°C Ringer’s Heart Rate 59 49 68 03/20/13 page 2 Post-lab Quiz Results You scored 75%
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centuries. Discuss the beliefs and concerns that these responses express. In the mid-fourteenth century of Europe‚ a deathly plague struck killing about 25 million people from a single fleabite. Once infected‚ a person would experience very high fevers‚ buboes‚ and die within a few days and it was an airborne disease making it an even more contagious disease. Depopulation‚ trading seized‚ and many people relocated are just some results of the plague. Many Europeans had numerous different beliefs
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5 Diseases Acording to Nightangle’s Environmental Theory Typhoid Typhoid fever is a bacterial infection caused by ingesting contaminated food or water. If there is not healthy food or healhty water avaiable‚ it can causes Typhoid Fever. Symptoms are characterized by headaches‚ nausea and loss of appetite. Skin Cancer If exposure to sunlight continues for several years‚ the damaged skin has an increased chance of developing one of the forms of skin cancer. Exposure to ultraviolet radiation
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known. We have studied the effects of fever and convulsions on water and electrolyte balance in CSF and serum by measuring osmolality and electrolyte concentrations in children. The febrile population consisted of 60 children‚ 36 of whom had seizures during fever. Twenty-one children without convulsions and nine children with epileptic symptoms were nonfebrile controls. We noticed that CSF is subject to changes in osmolality and electrolyte concentration during fever‚ while convulsions do not exhibit
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all people HEAT IS PRODUCED BY: • Metabolism • Increased muscle activity • Vasoconstriction • External sources HEAT IS LOST BY: • Vasodilation • Convection • Radiation • Conduction • Evaporization TEMP or FEVER? • TEMPERATURE—the measurement of heat in the body • FEVER—the measurement of heat in the body
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