Methergine should not be given to a patient who is breast feeding or a patient who has impaired hepatic or renal function.
Bone marrow type and blood type are not the same. You should get your bone marrow checked to see if it matches the patient's type. However, if you were to give your B+ type blood to the patient, then it would be compatible.
If you do not know what type to give, you should not be administering care to a patient.
They are not compatable and there will be clumping and clotting.
The Doctor is the one licensed to give out what type of drugs should be given to the patient and in what dosage depending on the condition of the patient or the age and weight of the patient.
What type of laboratory test(s) would NOT be conducted if you suspect a patient has contracted plague
Saline solution should always be in given as a concentration of 0.9% sodium chloride (NaCl).
An overweight and an obese patient would be put on a liquid or BRAT diet.
haemoglobin
When a person is bleeding in the hospital, one of the tests run is called a type and screen. In this test they determine the blood type of the patient and will match it to be the same. If the patient is bleeding too fast to do the test, they will give them O-, since that is considered to be the universal donor.
Gas Chromatography and Mass Spectrometry would not be conducted. The first thing that would happen if plague is suspected is immediate isolation. Contact with an infected patient needs to be minimized and the hospital needs to be equipped to handle that patient.
Vegetables
the letter d