An exposure incident is considered
when eye, mouth, or other mucous membrane or nonintact skin comes into contact with blood or saliva.
when the patient comes into contact with a contaminant at the office.
something that usually does not happen with proper training.
when there is a procedure that presents a potential for exposure.
when eye, mouth, or other mucous membrane or nonintact skin comes into contact with blood or saliva.
Rationale: when eye, mouth, or other mucous membrane or nonintact skin comes into contact with blood or saliva.
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You are checking your patient's physician's report and you see that is says the patient has a compromised ilium. You know that this means he probably has a(n):
A) injury to his small intestine. B) injury to his pelvis. C) problem with his esophagus. D) broken bone in his foot.
Casting is separately reported:
A) When a cast is replaced for stabilization or for patient comfort, by a separate physician B) For initial application by a physician who does not perform the fracture care C) When recasting is done during fracture, follow-up D) All of the above