Arrange these healthcare-shopping items into a meaningful path from illness to obtaining medication: Doctor, Fever, Medicine, Medical Shop.

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Fever, Doctor, Medical Shop, Medicine

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
This question blends clinical and consumer steps. When someone falls ill (fever), they consult a doctor, who may prescribe medicine. To obtain it, the person goes to a medical shop (pharmacy) to purchase the prescribed medicine. You must line up the tokens accordingly.



Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Tokens: Fever → Doctor → Medical Shop → Medicine.
  • Assume prescribed medication (not home remedies or OTC without consultation).


Concept / Approach:
Illness initiates the chain. The doctor provides diagnosis and prescription. The medical shop is the place of procurement. Finally, the medicine is the product obtained. Therefore, the meaningful consumer path is Fever → Doctor → Medical Shop → Medicine.



Step-by-Step Solution:
1) Fever: symptom onset.2) Doctor: professional evaluation.3) Medical Shop: fill prescription.4) Medicine: obtained product.Hence: Fever, Doctor, Medical Shop, Medicine.



Verification / Alternative check:
Placing medicine before medical shop would mean possessing drugs prior to purchase; placing doctor after medicine contradicts the prescriptive path.



Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Medical Shop, Medicine, Fever, Doctor: Starts with procurement before illness/consultation.
  • Doctor, Medical Shop, Medicine, Fever: Ends with illness, reversing causality.
  • Medicine, Doctor, Medical Shop, Fever: Entirely reversed.


Common Pitfalls:
Assuming OTC self-medication; the question models a formal and safer sequence.



Final Answer:
Fever, Doctor, Medical Shop, Medicine

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