Scenаriо:Yоu аre wоrking in the pediаtric unit. A 4-year-old child, Ava, is brought in by her mother with complaints of a fever and decreased appetite for the past two days. Mom reports that Ava has been "more tired than usual," is not playing, and has only been drinking "a few sips of juice." Ava appears listless, her skin is warm to the touch, and she is clinging to her mother. Her vital signs are:Temperature: 102.6°F (39.2°C)HR: 130 bpmRR: 28/minBP: 94/56 mmHgSpO₂: 96% on room airBased on Ava’s presentation and vitals, what are two priority nursing concerns?
In 2025, SnаckSurge, Inc. lаunched а trendy website, SnackSurgeNоw.cоm, which sells limited-editiоn snack foods through short “drops” announced on social media. The site is designed to create urgency. Users must act quickly before items sell out. When users arrive at the site, they see a large product image, a price, and a prominent orange button that reads “Click to Place Order.” Immediately above the button is a large countdown timer that indicates how long it will be until the latest deal sells out. Immediately, below the button, in small font, appears the sentence: “You agree to SnackSurge’s Terms, Policies, and Other Stuff.” The phrase “Terms, Policies, and Other Stuff” is a blue, underlined hyperlink. The words "You agree to" are in grey typeface. This text is visible without requiring the User to scroll down. Clicking on the hyperlink “Terms, Policies, and Other Stuff” takes Users to a new Page. At the top of that page, in bold text, appears the statement: “These Terms govern your use of SnackSurge and all purchases made through this site.” The page contains multiple sections, including shipping terms, refund policies, and a section titled “Fun Stuff (But Still Serious).” The “Fun Stuff (But Still Serious)” section includes the following provision: “If a customer complains publicly about SnackSurge on social media, SnackSurge reserves the right to demand one public apology in the form of a haiku praising SnackSurge’s snacks. Failure to provide such a haiku within 30 days will result in damages of $100.” Immediately following this provision, the Terms add: “We use humor in our drafting, but these obligations are legally binding.” Alex, a college student, visits SnackSurgeNow.com after seeing a post on Instagram advertising a limited-edition hot sauce. Alex notices the countdown timer and quickly clicks the “Click to Place Order” button. Alex does not see the language below the button referencing the “Terms, Policies, and Other Stuff.” After placing his order and receiving the hot sauce, Alex tweets: “SnackSurge hot sauce is wildly overrated. Would not recommend.” The tweet gains modest attention. SnackSurge emails Alex demanding a public haiku apology within 30 days or payment of $100. Alex refuses to provide the apology. SnackSurge sues Alex for breach of contract, seeking $100 in damages. Evaluate whether Alex is contractually obligated to pay SnackSurge $100. In doing so, make sure to analyze the two key issues raised by this fact pattern: (1) whether the "Terms, Policies, and Other Stuff" is enforceable browsewrap, and (2) whether the specific term requiring a public haiku apology within 30 days or payment of $100 is enforceable as a serious part of any agreement. For each of these two issues, make sure to use an IRAC structure, to analogize and/or distinguish a key case that we studied, and to consider the best counter-arguments to the outcome you think a court would be most likely to reach. Remember that you will be graded on the quality of your legal analysis, and not on the outcome that you ultimately conclude the court should reach.