Respuesta :
I'd say the answer is that the evidence is relevant and sufficient as it provides proper statistics, a reliable source, and supports the claim.
The correct answer is A. The evidence is both relevant and sufficient.
Explanation:
A claim is a statement about some issue that reflects the position of someone on some situation, in this case the author's position is that "Antibiotics are not always prescribed correctly"; additionally, for this position or claim to be valid it needs to be correctly supported, it means the author needs to provide evidence such as examples, statistics, scientific or research studies to show what he is claiming is true. In this case this evidence is taken from the "National Center for Biotechnology Information" (an information center that is part of the National Library of Medicine) and shows the percentage of cases in which antibiotics were not prescribed correctly for two reasons the first one is that the antibiotic was not the correct one and the second one is when the antibiotic is the correct but the dosage (amount of time) is not. Considering the evidence is taken from a reliable resource, which means the information can be believed and supports the claim showing the reader the effect of it in terms of percentage the evidence is relevant (it supports the claim) and sufficient (it explains the claim completely.