Question
Question
Which of the following could be absent from the grief process?(1 point)
Responses
bargaining
bargaining
death
death
acceptance
acceptance
Which of the following could be absent from the grief process?(1 point)
Responses
bargaining
bargaining
death
death
acceptance
acceptance
Answers
Answer
Which of the following is not on the hierarchy of needs?(1 point)
Responses
physical needs
physical needs
entertainment
entertainment
belonging
belonging
Responses
physical needs
physical needs
entertainment
entertainment
belonging
belonging
Answer
Your family’s home just flooded from a bad storm, but the clean-up is finished and things are finally getting back to normal. You don’t feel stressed, but you are still so tired and irritable all the time. Which reaction to stress could you be experiencing?(1 point)
Responses
fight-or-flight stage
fight-or-flight stage
alarm stage
alarm stage
exhaustion stage
Responses
fight-or-flight stage
fight-or-flight stage
alarm stage
alarm stage
exhaustion stage
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
In the context of the grief process, the element that could be absent is **bargaining**. While many people may go through various stages of grief, not everyone experiences all of the stages, such as bargaining. Death, on the other hand, is a necessary component of the grief process, and acceptance is often seen as a vital stage that many strive to reach.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The option that is not on the hierarchy of needs is **entertainment**. The hierarchy of needs, as proposed by Abraham Maslow, includes levels such as physical needs (physiological needs), belonging (social needs), safety needs, esteem needs, and self-actualization, but it does not specifically include entertainment as a category.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
In this scenario, you could be experiencing the **exhaustion stage** of stress. After the immediate stressors of a flood and the clean-up process have passed, feelings of tiredness and irritability can be signs that your body has reacted to prolonged stress and is now in a state of exhaustion. The fight-or-flight stage and the alarm stage are typically associated with the immediate response to a stressor, while the exhaustion stage reflects the body's depletion of resources after enduring prolonged stress.
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