The client has the following physician orders: Administer…

The client has the following physician orders: Administer Humulin NPH insulin 14 units every day at 7 am. Administer Humulin NPH insulin 10 units every day at 5 pm. Sliding scale for Regular insulin only, three times a day (7 am, 11 am, and 5 pm) according to CBG results: CBG 300–400: give 12 units Regular insulin CBG 200–299: give 8 units Regular insulin CBG 100–199: give 4 units Regular insulin CBG up to 99: give no insulin Question: The 7 am CBG is 103. How many units total will the client receive at 7 am? [BLANK-1]

The client has the following physician orders: Administer…

The client has the following physician orders: Administer Humulin NPH insulin 20 units every day at 7 am. Administer Humulin NPH insulin 16 units every day at 5 pm. Sliding scale for Regular insulin only, three times a day (7 am, 11 am, and 5 pm) according to CBG results: CBG 300–400: give 11 units Regular insulin CBG 200–299: give 7 units Regular insulin CBG 100–199: give 4 units Regular insulin CBG up to 99: give no insulin Question: The 5 pm blood glucose was 215. How many total units of insulin will be given at that time? [BLANK-1]

For the following defective definition, indicate if it is to…

For the following defective definition, indicate if it is too broad, too narrow, circular, or some combination of the three.  If it is too broad or too narrow, demonstrate the problem with an example of what the proposed definition wrongly applies to or fails to apply to.  If it is circular, explain what you are thinking. (4 points) A hypothetical syllogism is a kind of deductive argument with two premises, at least one of which is in if-then form, where the conclusion follows validly from the premises.