340 meters per minute. (This speed seems too high for any person or animal actually to run.)
i think that means you're going to die
I guess this is best solved by trial and error. Try to multiply two consecutive numbers; if the product is too low, try higher number, if the product is too high, try lower numbers. For example, 20 x 21 = 420; since this is too low, your numbers are higher than that; 30 x 31 = 930; since this is too high, your numbers are lower than that.I guess this is best solved by trial and error. Try to multiply two consecutive numbers; if the product is too low, try higher number, if the product is too high, try lower numbers. For example, 20 x 21 = 420; since this is too low, your numbers are higher than that; 30 x 31 = 930; since this is too high, your numbers are lower than that.I guess this is best solved by trial and error. Try to multiply two consecutive numbers; if the product is too low, try higher number, if the product is too high, try lower numbers. For example, 20 x 21 = 420; since this is too low, your numbers are higher than that; 30 x 31 = 930; since this is too high, your numbers are lower than that.I guess this is best solved by trial and error. Try to multiply two consecutive numbers; if the product is too low, try higher number, if the product is too high, try lower numbers. For example, 20 x 21 = 420; since this is too low, your numbers are higher than that; 30 x 31 = 930; since this is too high, your numbers are lower than that.
Too many variables. But you can estimate by dividing by 50 (weeks in a year) and get 1440 per week. If you assume a 40 hour week, then $36 per hour.
Yes. Seek medical advice as a matter of priority.
No
No
the poopy poops of poopyvile
Yes. If the baby is at rest. Not if it is playing or excited.
AnswerThe normal breathing rate is 16-20 breaths every minute for the average adult (male and female)Don't Know Who Wrote This But Respiration Rates Vary Among Age Groups.Newborns: Average 44 breaths per minuteInfants: 40-60 breaths per minutePreschool children: 20-30 breaths per minuteOlder children: 16-25 breaths per minuteAdults: 12-20 breaths per minuteAdults during strenuous exercise 35-45 breathsWatch The Person Breathe For One Full Minute, and Count The Number Of Breaths They Take. One Full Breath In/ One Full Breath Out Is Considered One Full Respiration. Some Will Say Count For 30 seconds and multiply by 2, but I'd rather count for the full minute. Or if you can't do it that way, place your hand on the person's chest while you count. With their permission that is.
Children breathe faster than adults. Body size, weight and activity level influence normal breathing rates. But age is the factor most commonly used to determine normal values. Normal breathing rate ranges from as high as 30 to 60 breaths per minute at birth to as low as 12 to 16 breaths per minute at age 18. Breathing maintains the child's critical balance of oxygen and carbon dioxide. Breaths by Age According to the New York State Department of Health, infants, from birth to 1 year, should have 30 to 60 breaths per minute. Toddlers, ages 1 to 3, breathe 24 to 40 times per minute. Pre-schoolers, ages 3 to 6 years, average 22 to 34 breaths per minute. Six- to 12-year-olds have 18 to 30 breaths per minute. Adolescents, ages 12 to 18, have 12 to 16 breaths per minute. Things to Consider Children are not all alike, and various authorities report slightly different normal breathing ranges, though most vary by only a few percent. But the trend of decreasing normal rate with increasing age remains unchanged in all cases. Normal rates vary according to weight, activity levels and growth-related developmental milestones. Breathing for Equilibrium Normal breathing rate is important because breathing delivers oxygen to a developing child's heart, brain, liver and all the other organ systems. A child not only needs oxygen for ongoing metabolism, like an adult, but for creation of new and growing tissues, bones and nerves. Breathing also eliminates carbon dioxide, the normal waste product of metabolism and growth. A child's biochemistry is carefully balanced between too much and too little carbon dioxide. A normal breathing rate is one of the most important regulators of that balance.
340 meters per minute. (This speed seems too high for any person or animal actually to run.)
the normal range for rispiratory rate is from 15 to 20 breathes in 15 seconds. then the numbers fo breathes is multiplied by 4 to get the nukber of breathes in a minute. *******************WRONG****************** this would be one breath every second. too much! The ranges for rates of normal respiration are as follows: ________________________ ADULT= 12-20 breaths/minute CHILD= 15-30 breaths/minute INFANT=25-50 breaths/minute ________________________ R. Griffith, FF/EMT-B, Paramedic Student
A fit person's heart rate is usually closer to 70 beats per minute. 94 is high.
At rest the normal heart rate of a newborn is 100 to 160 beats per minute; between the ages of 1 and 10 is 60 to 140 beats per minute; and 11 to 17 is 60 to 100 beats per minute. You should contact a doctor if the heart rate is higher or lower than this.
Hi There, BPM = beats per minute not breaths. Breathing does not constitute the exact amounts of your heart beating, its more supplying oxygen to your systems. In a normal relaxed state humans stay around a 60bpm pulse/heart rate. If you start to reach 100-120 you are either panicing or in a distressed state (or have high blood pressure, high blood sugar etc)
the normal range for rispiratory rate is from 15 to 20 breathes in 15 seconds. then the numbers fo breathes is multiplied by 4 to get the nukber of breathes in a minute. *******************WRONG****************** this would be one breath every second. too much! The ranges for rates of normal respiration are as follows: ________________________ ADULT= 12-20 breaths/minute CHILD= 15-30 breaths/minute INFANT=25-50 breaths/minute ________________________ R. Griffith, FF/EMT-B, Paramedic Student