Write in a COMPLETE Sentence a description of the "faux wound" that is located at the surface of the body at the TIP OF THE SWORD. Do NOT try to describe depth or how "deep" the sword is going into the body. This is a surface wound ONLY. In your sentence you need to include the following information: Left vs right side of the body Aspect or surface side of the body (e.g., anterior side or posterior aspect of the body part) Regional terms (e.g., brachial, femoral, pectoral, antebrachial, axillary, among many others…see your PPTX for a list) Orientation terms (e.g., anterior, poster, lateral, medial, proximal, distal, superior, inferior). Bone, suture, tendon/ligament attachment landmarks that will help you pinpoint the location. Do not use a muscle belly name.
Write in a COMPLETE Sentence a description of the "faux wound" that is located at the surface of the body at the TIP OF THE SWORD. Do NOT try to describe depth or how "deep" the sword is going into the body. This is a surface wound ONLY. In your sentence you need to include the following information: Left vs right side of the body Aspect or surface side of the body (e.g., anterior side or posterior aspect of the body part) Regional terms (e.g., brachial, femoral, pectoral, antebrachial, axillary, among many others…see your PPTX for a list) Orientation terms (e.g., anterior, poster, lateral, medial, proximal, distal, superior, inferior). Bone, suture, tendon/ligament attachment landmarks that will help you pinpoint the location. Do not use a muscle belly name.
Chapter10: Medication Administration Essentials
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 21RQ
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- Write in a COMPLETE Sentence a description of the "faux wound" that is located at the surface of the body at the TIP OF THE SWORD.
- Do NOT try to describe depth or how "deep" the sword is going into the body. This is a surface wound ONLY.
- In your sentence you need to include the following information:
- Left vs right side of the body
- Aspect or surface side of the body (e.g., anterior side or posterior aspect of the body part)
- Regional terms (e.g., brachial, femoral, pectoral, antebrachial, axillary, among many others…see your PPTX for a list)
- Orientation terms (e.g., anterior, poster, lateral, medial, proximal, distal, superior, inferior).
- Bone, suture, tendon/ligament attachment landmarks that will help you pinpoint the location. Do not use a muscle belly name.
- DISTANCES to landmark. You can use inches or cm as needed to increase your specificity.
- a) superior/inferior or proximal/distal AND b) the medial-lateral dimension.
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