Asked by R
Which conclusions can be drawn about Eli’s situation? Check all that apply.
He may still be covered in some cases.
He can avoid problems by being cautious.
He faces more risk than insured people do.
He may have to take precautions, but many factors are beyond his control.
Not being able to afford insurance was a factor in him not being covere
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I don’t have the passage about Eli, so I can’t be certain which statements are directly supported. Please paste the text or summarize the relevant details.
If you want a best-guess based on a typical “uninsured person” scenario, these are the likely correct choices and why:
- He may still be covered in some cases. — Likely true. Even people without regular insurance can have coverage in specific situations (emergency care, government programs, limited charity care).
- He can avoid problems by being cautious. — Partly true. Caution reduces risk, but it doesn’t eliminate all medical or financial problems.
- He faces more risk than insured people do. — Likely true. Being uninsured generally increases financial and access risks.
- He may have to take precautions, but many factors are beyond his control. — True. He can take steps to reduce risk, yet accidents, sudden illness, or systemic barriers can still affect him.
- Not being able to afford insurance was a factor in him not being covered. — Unknown without the passage. This is only supported if the text states cost was the reason.
Tell me the passage (or confirm which assumptions are allowed) and I’ll mark the definite answers.
If you want a best-guess based on a typical “uninsured person” scenario, these are the likely correct choices and why:
- He may still be covered in some cases. — Likely true. Even people without regular insurance can have coverage in specific situations (emergency care, government programs, limited charity care).
- He can avoid problems by being cautious. — Partly true. Caution reduces risk, but it doesn’t eliminate all medical or financial problems.
- He faces more risk than insured people do. — Likely true. Being uninsured generally increases financial and access risks.
- He may have to take precautions, but many factors are beyond his control. — True. He can take steps to reduce risk, yet accidents, sudden illness, or systemic barriers can still affect him.
- Not being able to afford insurance was a factor in him not being covered. — Unknown without the passage. This is only supported if the text states cost was the reason.
Tell me the passage (or confirm which assumptions are allowed) and I’ll mark the definite answers.
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