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| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| A ___ strategy requires the patient to be aware of their situation and impairments but this can help improve function faster than other strategies | compensatory |
| ___ is the appreciation of stimuli through organs. | sensation |
| Damage to cranial nerves IX and X will lead to a patient being given the status of NPO. This means they suffer from ___. | dysphagia |
| ___ is a cognitive impairment that reduces a patient's ability to perform voluntary movements without reason except for the brain injury. | apraxia |
| ___ is a cognitive impairment that causes a patient to repeat words or actions over and over. | preservation |
| ___ is a cognitive impairment that has reduced the patient's ability to process sensory information. | agnosia |
| ___ ___ is the ability to plan, problem solve, and think abstractly. | executive function |
| ___ attention is when no matter the amount of various stimuli the patient can stay on task. | selective |
| B___ ___ (I gave you the first letter but you need to still include it in your answer) is a language disorder that presents with broken speech but comprehension is still present. | broca's aphasia |
| ___ attention is when a patient can do 2 or more tasks at the same time but it is IMPOSSIBLE to give 100% attention on each | divided |
| If a patient begins to "drift off" this means he or she lacks ___ ___. | sustained attention |
| ___ attention is when a patient can do a task and then switch to another task and then go back to the first task | alternating |
| ___ is the ability to take sensory information and make it psychologically meaningful. | perception |
| W___ ___ (I gave you the first letter but you need to still include it in your answer) is a language disorder that presents with fluid speech but it often times makes little to no sense. | wernicke's aphasia |