Arrange the following to reflect a realistic healthcare chain from illness to remedy: Doctor, Fever, Medicine, Medical Shop (pharmacy) Choose the most logical order that a patient typically experiences.

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Fever, Doctor, Medical Shop, Medicine

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Such questions test practical day-to-day reasoning. When someone falls ill, they first notice symptoms (fever), then seek professional advice (doctor), procure the prescribed drugs from a pharmacy (medical shop), and finally take the medicine. Ordering these correctly shows understanding of cause–effect and procedural steps.



Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Fever indicates illness prompting action.
  • The doctor evaluates and issues a prescription.
  • Medical shop fills the prescription.
  • Medicine is then consumed by the patient.


Concept / Approach:
Place the stimulus (fever) first, then expert consultation, then fulfillment, then consumption. This mirrors standard patient flow and avoids circular or impossible steps (e.g., taking medicine before seeing a doctor when a prescription is implied).



Step-by-Step Solution:
Start: Fever.Next: Visit Doctor to diagnose and prescribe.Then: Go to Medical Shop to purchase the prescribed drugs.Finally: Take Medicine.Hence: Fever → Doctor → Medical Shop → Medicine.



Verification / Alternative check:
Reverse-checking shows any path starting with medicine or pharmacy before fever is illogical without prior indication.



Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Medical Shop, Medicine, Fever, Doctor: purchases before illness is noticed.
  • Doctor, Medical Shop, Medicine, Fever: fever must precede doctor.
  • Medicine, Doctor, Medical Shop, Fever: wrong on multiple causal steps.
  • None of these: unnecessary; a correct order exists.


Common Pitfalls:
Ignoring the implied need for a prescription in exam logic. Assume standard flow requiring a doctor’s advice.



Final Answer:
Fever, Doctor, Medical Shop, Medicine

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