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Foundations 1

First Test - Heather Snell

QuestionAnswer
List the 4 Nursing skills? Cognitive, Technical, Interpersonal, Ethical/Legal
Nursing Characteristics? Specialized education, unique body of knowledge, research, code of ethics, autonomy, service orientation, professional organization
Florence Nightengale use of enviornment, nursing as an art, founder of modern nursing
Clara Barton Started Red Cross
Dorothea Dix Treatment of mentally ill
Lillian Wald Founder of Public Health Nursing
Harriet Tubman Underground railroad, abolitionist
Isabel Robb 1st president of ANA, limited # of hrs
Mary Adele Nutting 1st professor of nursing
Lavinia Dock Womens right's activist
Mary Breckenridge first midwifery schools in US
Nurse Practice Act 1) laws established in each state2) Defines scope of nursing3) Defines terms and activites in nursing4) Establishes education and license criteria
Assualt threat or attempt to make bodily contact
battery assualt that is carried out, actually touching
What are 2 forms of defamation? slander and libel
slander oral defamation of character, "S" for spoken
libel written defamation of character
What are some intentional torts? assualt, battery, libel, slander
What are some unintentional torts? negligence, malpractice, liability, standards of care
What are nurses obligated to do when they see abuse? report it, if you don't that is a crime in itself
Types of abuse? physical, verbal, sexual, neglect, abandonment
Safe Harbor a good faith of an assignment that the nurse feels is unsafe and that may result in a violation of the NPA or board rules
Give Safe Harbor law example 8:1 patient to nurse ratioalso Katrina
Peer Review Evaluation by other nurses, review may be formal or non-formal
Whistle Blower nurse may report another practitioner or facility that has exposed a patient to substantial risk
Which program is regulated by state?Medicare/medicaid Medicaid is regulated by state
In 1965 Medicare was established to help which population? Elderly
In 1972 Medicare was increased to include which other population instead of just the elderly? Disables Workers
Besides disabled and elderly, who else qualifies for Medicare? Those in end stage renal failure
Part A medicare pays for what? Inpatient Hospital costs
Part D medicare pays for what? Medical equipment and Home health
Part B medicare pays for what? Physician visits, medications
Who is Medicaid for? Any age and low income, blind, elderly, women, childern and disabled
HMO's? patient does not have choice of health providers, only from physicians that are associated with HMO
7 Managed Care Types? HMOPPOprivate insurancegovernment agencies(VA)Veterans administration agencyPublic Health ServicesPublic Health Agencies
(HIPA) Health Insurance Portability and Accountability ACT - patients must know which information will be disclosed-can obtain copy of health record and can be updated as patient pleases-transfer of insurance when job is changed
Patient Self Determination Act -autonomy of patient, can refuse care-patient must be informed
Americans with Disabilities ACT -protects people with AIDS, alcohol, and drug problems-must be reasonably able to accomodate disabled people-covers people with physical/mental impairment
Balanced Budget Act Medicare/Medicaid benfits, reduced the payments that providers received from medicare
Under the Nurse Practice Act a nurse must follow? The Standards of Praactice "ADOPIE"
The 3 levels of prevention are? primary preventive care, secondary preventive care, tertiary preventive care
Primary Preventive Care promotes health and prevention of disease
ex of primary preventive care? diet, excersise, safe sex, seat belts
secondary preventive care focuses on early detection of disease
ex of secondary preventive care screenings, pap smear, testis examination
tertiary preventive care begins once illness is diagnosed and treated to reduce disability
ex of tertiary preventive care surical treatment, job training, physical therapy
Levels of Care? Primary CareSecondary CareTertiary Care
Primary Care Physician Offices, clinics, ambulatory care
Secondary Care Home Health and Hospitals
Tertiary Care Rehab centers, hospice organizations
Basic(pure) Research designed to generate and refine theory, findings often not useful in practice
Applied Research directly influences or improves clinical procedure
Experimental Research Examines cause and effect between variables in controlled conditions
Descriptive Research Explores and desribes events in real life situations
Give 3 types of Quantitative Reseach methods Historical, Ethnography, Phenomenology
Negative Correlation as one variable increases other decreases ↑↓
Positive Correlation ↑↑ or ↓↓
Patient Right of Informed Consent patients right to consent knowledgebly to participate in a study
3 Specific Patient Rights in Research informed consent, confidentiality, the right to be protected from harm
Complementary Health Practice A holistic approach to healthcare, complements western medicice without interfering, yoga, candles, etc...
Advantages of screening simple, cheap, disease specific testing
Disadvantages of screening margin of error
Purpose of screening detect disease in early stages, thus reduce cost of managing disease
3 factors in evaluating screening instruments reliability, validity, prevalence study
In regards to screening, what does reliability mean? ability to reproduce the same results over and over
In regards to screening, what does validity mean? Give valid results
Give an example of prevalence study done in class? Who in this classroom smokes?
In regards to screening, what does incidence mean? the frequency of new cases during a specific period
In regards to screening, what does prevalance mean? the proportion of existing cases during a specific time
Mortality v.s Morbidity Morbidity is an unhealthy condition. Mortality is the fatal outcome of morbidity (death).
Creator of High-Level Wellness Model Dunn
Creator of Agent-Host-Enviornment Triangle Model Leavell and Clark
Creator of Illness-Wellness Continuum Travis
Who thought Wellness is centered around self-responsibility? Ardell
What can you say about Smith and his model of health? It includes all aspects of Health:clinicalrole performanceadaptiveeudaemonistic
Eudaemonistic capacity fo produce happiness
who thought of the asymmetrical dot model? Greenburg
list 5 wellness models -high level wellness model-agent-host-enviornment triangle model-illness-wellness continuum-self responsibility-asymmetrical dot
Dunns' High level wellness model -describes "good health" as a passive state where person is not ill-descries "wellness" as more active state, moving towards maximizing potential
Leavell & CLarke's famous for? agent-host-enviornment triangle model, health is seen when all 3 elements are in balance
Travis is famous for? Illness Wellness Continoum, composed of 2 arrows pointing in opposite directions, if moves to right (healthy) if moves to left (death)
Ardell is famous for? Wellness is centered around self-responsibilityself responsibility, nutrition, physical, stress, enviornment
Greenburg is famous for? Asymmetrical Dot: 5 components(physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, social)
Name 5 Nursing theory models 1) Dorothea Oream: Self-care2) Callista Roy: Adaptation3) MADeline Leininger: cultural4) Rosemarie Parse: Human becomming Theory 5) Lydia E. Hall: Developed Nursing Process "ADOPIE"
Callista Roy famous for Adaptation Theory
Dorothea Orem famous for Self Care
Madelie Leinenger famous for Cultural care diversity
Lydia E. Hall famous for Developing Nursing Process "ADOPIE"
List the steps of the Nursing Process "ADOPIE" AssessmentDiagnosisplanningoutcomeimplementevaluate
4 major things nurses do with data during assessment collect, validate, organize, document data
4 types of assessments initial, problem-focused, emergency, time-lapsed
In emergency assessment what is the main thing to do? identify and prioritize (ABC)
Give example of Subjective data my tummy hurts
Give example of object data BP 90-50
3 parts of diagnostic statement problem(NANDA diagnoses), related to, symptomatology(as evidenced by)
Give example of High priority ABC (emergency)
Give example of low priority risks
Give example of medium priority actual diagnosis from NANDA
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs Physiological, safety, love, self-esteem, self-actualization
stereotyping assuming all members of a culture act alike
give example of stereotyping all arabs are terrorists
give example of cultural imposition-belief Native Americans
cultural imposition belief everyone should conform to the majority belief system
cultural blindness result of ignoring differences
give example of cultural blindness ex from class, washing off herbs and spices
cultural conflict sense of feeling threatened by cultural diff
give example of cultural conflict Arizona Law
Ethnocentrism belief that ones ideas, beliefs, and practices are superior or are most preferred by others
give example of Ethnocentrism UTEP Fast-Track students are the best
Types of communication verbal, non-verbal, meta-communication
Characteristics of Therapeutic Relationships purposefulrapporttrustempathy
Techniques in therapuetic relationships clarify message givenrestateconstructive confrontationsilencerespect
Barriers to effective communication attitudegaps(age, religion, language)transferencefailure to consider settingfailure to listengossip and giving false assurance
What is one of the most important things when teaching? what u teach must be relevant or useful immediately!!!!
For teaching evaluation, how do you evaluate cognition? Ask patient, give a mini quiz
For teaching evaluation, how do you evaluate affective? See if their attitude changes
For teaching evaluation, how do you evaluate psychomotor? Ask patient to demonstrate the new skill
What is the main goal of teaching? Behavioral change
Created by: cbetance
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