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reverse definitions
professionalism reverse defs
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| externship | a cooperative or workplace experience or period of training for a student that is provided by the student's educational facility. |
| clinic | a facility providing medical care on an outpatient basis. It may be free-standing or associated with a hospital. |
| administrative health professional (AHP) | a graduate from an accredited health office administrative program who assumes administrative, communications, and/or clinical responsibilities in a health care setting. |
| licensure | a legal document, obtained after passing written and clinical examinations, that is required for health care practitioners in regulated fields. |
| preceptor | a mentor who guides and supervises a student throughout a workplace experience. |
| duty | a moral obligation |
| right | a moral, legal cultural, or traditional claim. |
| sick role | a particular social role that an ill person adopts, which involves giving up normal responsibilities and accepting care. May sometimes involve uncharacteristically passive behaviour |
| client | a person seeking or receiving health care; synonymous with patient, but suggests a more active role. |
| medical office assistant/administrator | a person who handles primarily administrative responsibilities, but also some clinical duties in a health office (titles vary) |
| medical assistant | a person who is trained to assist a physician with various clinical tests, examinations, and procedures. |
| behaviour | a persons discernable responses and actions. |
| autonomy | a person's right to self-determination. In health care it refers to a client's right to make his own decisions without coercion--decisions for treatment for example, based on fact and being fully informed of all treatment options. |
| role | a position in life that carries expectations of responsibilities and of appropriate behaviour |
| health | according to one definition "relative state in which one is able to function well physically, mentally, socially, and spiritually in order to express the full range of one's unique potentialities within the environment in which one is living" |
| code of ethics | a set of guidelines for ethical conduct |
| wellness | a state of physical and emotional well-being, broadly considered |
| post-partum | after delivery |
| ALS | also known as Amytrophic Lateral Sclerosis or Lou Gherig's disease. This is a progressive disease affecting the nerves that are responsible for muscle stimulation. There is no known cure. |
| attribute | an inborn personal quality or characteristic |
| ward clerk | an individual who manages the administrative and communication needs of a client care unit. The title is being replaced with clinical secretary or communications coordinator. |
| allied health care | any duty or profession that supports primary health -care providers, such as physicians, nurse practitioners or midwives, in delivering health care services. |
| triage | assessing the seriousness of a client's presenting problem to determine who needs to have medical help first (chest pain vs sore throat) |
| alternative health care or complementary health care | nontraditional methods and practices, based on a natural approach, including chiropractic, acupuncture, massage, and aromatherapy. |
| regulated profession | a field legally restricted to practitioners with a specific professional qualification and/or provincial or territorial registration |
| initiative | the ability to assess when something needs to be done and to do it. |
| core competency | the basic or essential skills that one needs to succeed in a particular profession. |
| values | the beliefs a person holds dear and that guide that person's decisions and behaviour or conduct. |
| culture | the languages, beliefs, values, norms, behaviours and even material objects that are passed from one generation to the next. |
| remission | the phase of a chronic disease characterized by a relief or absence of clinical signs or symptoms. |
| exacerbation | the phase of a chronic disease characterized by a return of clinical signs or symptoms. |
| ethics | the philosophical study of standards accepted by society that determine what is right and wrong in human behaviour. |
| ethnocentrism | the tendency to use our own culture's standards as the yardstick to judge everyone; the belief in the superiority of our own group or culture |
| subculture | the values and practices of a group that distinguish it from the larger culture |
| morals | what a person believes to be right and wrong pertaining to how to act, treat others, and get along in an organized society. |
| scope of practice | the parameters of duties and responsibilities as outlined by one's professional training and skill set. |
| tolerance | allowing people to have their own beliefs, opinions, and way of doing things. |
| stereotyping | assuming that all members of a group will be alike. |
| prejudice | coming to conclusions about a person or group on the basis of untested assumptions, without regard for facts. |
| justice | considers concepts of fairness and entitlements, can involve oral or legal issues. |
| transcription | creating a written copy of a dictated or recorded message. |
| transitional phase | diagnosis and treatment. |
| spiritual | for some, means a belief in and dedication to a higher power; for others, it is a personal or interior quality tied to emotions, values and morals. |
| veracity | honesty or truthfulness. |
| intellectual | involves our cognitive ability to determine what is right and what is not. |
| emotional | involves recognizing one's own strengths and weaknesses, being able to analyze and deal with problems and recognize when one needs help. |
| skill | is learned. |
| nationality | manifested when a person belongs to a country with all its legal and social benefits. |
| faithfulness | meeting the reasonable expectations of others. |
| discrimination | occurs when people are denied justice or treated unfairly because of their membership in a group. |
| race | often used to refer to groups of people with similar physical characteristics and a common ancestry. |
| social | people with partners and strong social networks are more likely to be physically healthy. |
| empathy | putting yourself in other's shoes. |
| resolution phase | recovery/rehabilitation/death |
| physical | refers to the body's health and functioning. |
| ethnicity | refers to the cultural characteristics of a particular ethnic group. |
| ethnic | relating to groups of people with a common racial, religious, linguistic. or cultural heritage. |
| beneficence | requires that we benefit others and act in the person's best interest. |
| action phase | seeking medical intervention. |
| acknowledgement phase | sustained clinical signs. |
| stable | the client's condition has steadied; good news but doesn't indicate a sure recovery. |
| preliminary phase | the appearance of clinical signs. |
| satisfactory | the client continues to improve and is usually out of danger. |
| guarded | the client has moved from critical toward wellness; condition is still volatile and subject to change. |
| good | the client is believed to be on firm footing and is expected to recover. |
| critical | the client is hanging in the balance between life and death and is receiving active intervention. |
| poor | the client is near death but not receiving active intervention. |