Quiz Chapter 1-3

Quiz Chapter 1-3
100問 • 2年前
  • Flinch Eidref Liongson
  • 通報

    問題一覧

  • 1

    Assist patients with their day-to-day care. Their duties include helping patients to bathe and get dressed.

    definition of nursing assistant

  • 2

    Utilizes one Rn, one LPN and one CNA to work as a term to care for a group f 9-12 patients

    Nursing Team

  • 3

    carry out the routine work in the general care of patients

    nursing assistant

  • 4

    nursin assitant's task include:

    Serving trays and feeding resident, Helping resident dress and undress, bathing, shaving and shampooing, bedmaking and tidying living areas, measuring the vital sign

  • 5

    NA do not perform

    Inserting or removing tubes Giving tube feeding Changing Sterile dressing Giving medication

  • 6

    Same thing as Nursing Assistant

    Nursing Aide, Patient Care Attendant, Health Care Assistant, Patient Care Technician, Certified Nursing Assistant

  • 7

    Works under the supervision of doctors and Rn's performing duties such as taking vital signs collecting samples

    LPN and LVN

  • 8

    The role requires education in a state- approved program, which will typically last between 12 and 18 months

    LPN and LVN

  • 9

    The largest health care occupation for good reason: they give patients medical care, educate them about their health issues and offer emotional support

    Registered Nurse

  • 10

    Evaluates individual and collective outcomes of patient care provided during their shift, compares patient vare delivery to accepted standards

    Charge Nurse

  • 11

    Primary Task is to provide short-term care for people with severe health issues resulting from injury, disease or genetic anomaly

    Hospital

  • 12

    Referred to as outpatient or same day surgery centres, these facilities offer a safe environment for the surgery

    Ambulatory Surgical Centre

  • 13

    Is designed for patients who require constant care but do not need to be hospitalized and cannot be cared for at home

    Nursing Home

  • 14

    Medical personal onsite 24 hours a day. Skilled Nurses and therapist are on staff to oversee and provide

    Nursing Home

  • 15

    Nursing Home's staff offers help with basic task that can be challenging for individuals with health issues

    Nursing Home

  • 16

    This is the condition of being required to account for one's action

    responsibility

  • 17

    Involves assignment of the performance of activities or task related to patient care to unlicensed assistive personnel while retaining accountability for the outcome

    Delegation

  • 18

    Being responsible to someone, or for some action, and that you are able to explain

    Accountability

  • 19

    5 effective delegation include

    Analyse your task Select the delegate Define the task Provide support Monitor and review

  • 20

    She said "The act of utilizing the invironment of the patients to assist him in his recovery"

    Florence Nightangle

  • 21

    She tended to wounded soldiers at night and was known as "The Lady with the Lamp"

    Florence Nightangle

  • 22

    She is recognized as the founder of modern nursing

    Florence Nightangle

  • 23

    The first nurse theorist well-known for developing the environment

    Florence Nightangle

  • 24

    What is the five environmental Factors of Florence Nightangle

    Fresh Air, Pure water, Efficient Drainage, Sanitation, Direct Sunlight

  • 25

    she define that nursing as the participation if care, core and cure aspects of patient care. a

    Lydia Hall

  • 26

    What is the three model of Lydia Hall

    Care, Core, Cure

  • 27

    The primary role of professional nurse Basic daily biologocal functions as eating, bathing elimination and dressing

    Care.

  • 28

    The patient receiving the nursing care Emphasizes the patent social, emotional and spiritual and intellectual needs

    Core

  • 29

    The administration of medications treatment

    Cure

  • 30

    She said "An interpersonal process of therapeutic interactions between an individual who is sick or in need of help services and a nurse especially educated to recognize respond for the need for help.

    Hildegard Peplau

  • 31

    She has interpersonal Relationship theory

    Hildegard Peplau

  • 32

    What is the for phases of the Therapeutic relationship

    Orientation phase, Identification Phase, Exploitation Phase, resolution

  • 33

    Involves engaging the client in treatment providing explanations and informations and answering question

    Orientation Phase

  • 34

    when the client works interdependently with the nurse, expresses feelings, and begins to feel stronger

    Identification Phase

  • 35

    He was an American psychologist who developed a hierachy of needs to explain human motivation

    Abraham Maslow

  • 36

    His theory suggested that people have several basic needs that must be met before people move up to hierarchy to pursue more social, emotional and self actializing needs

    Abraham Maslow

  • 37

    what is the 5 maslow hierchy of needs

    Physiologcal, Safety, Love belonging, esteem, self actualization

  • 38

    She created the theory of human caring

    Jean Watson

  • 39

    She said "Humans cannot he treated as objects and that humans cannot be seperated from self, other, nature and the large workforce

    Jean Watson

  • 40

    Types of caring factors

    Trust Personal Growth and Practices Inspire Nurture Forgive Open

  • 41

    She has the self care theory

    Dorothea Orem

  • 42

    She said the act if assisting others in the provision and management of self-care to maintain or improve human functioning

    Dorothea Orem

  • 43

    What is the three Orem's Theory

    The Theory Of Self Care The Theory of Self-Care Deficit The Theory od Nursing System

  • 44

    Barriers in the delegate

    Lack of experience, competence, self confidence, incentives, fear of harsh criticism from supervisor, over dependece on the boss, overload of work

  • 45

    The condition of being required to account for one's action

    Resposibility

  • 46

    The Client makes full ise if the services offered

    Exploitation Phase

  • 47

    A set of values, behaviors and relationships that underpins the trust the public has in doctors working in partnership with members of the wider healthcare team

    Professionalism

  • 48

    A healthcare professional is a person trained to work in health or health-related field, In most cases or physical health field.

    Professional

  • 49

    The act behaving properlu for a certain job, a person enagaged or qualified in a profession

    Professional

  • 50

    Professinal attitudes in nursing comprise of inclinations, feelings and emotional conform to their principles and serve as the basis for their behaviors

    Attitude

  • 51

    Professional behavior or behavioural professionalism however is behaving in a manner to achieve optional outcomes

    Attitude

  • 52

    Focuses on the performance or practice of activities of individuals perform their own behalf

    The Theory of Self Care

  • 53

    Which defines when nursing is needed because a person is limited or incapable of providing self care and needs help

    The Theory of Self Care deficit

  • 54

    Focuses on the relationship between a nurse and client and the wholly or partial compensatory nursing system

    The Theory of Nursing System

  • 55

    List of qualities that nursing assistants must have

    Trustworthy, conscientious, courteous, emphatic, accountable

  • 56

    Examples of the job of a CNA requires heavy lifting, CNA's have the right to work in a safe environment.

    Safe work environment

  • 57

    CNAs are generally paid by the hour with the average hourly wage being $11.46 according to 2008 data from the BLS

    Overtime

  • 58

    Cnas have the right to work in an environment that is free from discrimination and harrassment by supervisors, co-workers and patients

    Discrimination/Harrassment

  • 59

    Each states maintains rosters of CNAs who have complaints of abuse or neglect are place on this roster.

    Right to appeal

  • 60

    This neccessitates a review of the incident that initiated the complain and generally ends when the state issues a final report or letter indicatijg its findings and whether the appeal has been accepted

    Right to Appeal

  • 61

    Defines Rn and LVP/LVN and their scope of practices

    Nursing Assistant Acts

  • 62

    Protects the public from persons practicing nursing without a license.

    Nursing Assistants Acts

  • 63

    Simply defined, is a principle that describes what is expected in terms of right and correct and wrong, incorrect in terms and behavior.

    Ethics Definition

  • 64

    Health Care ethics, is the application of the core principles if bioethics, to medical and health care decisions. It is a multidiscriplinary lens through which to view complex issues and make recommendations regarding a course of action

    Ethics Definition

  • 65

    Health Care laws means all applicable current and future laws, rules, regulatoons, codes, ordinances, orders and decrees,

    Law

  • 66

    Designed to prevent harm to others while protecting the rights of individuals. As a healthcare worker ut is your duty to care that if you breach that duty and someone is injured because of that breach, there will be a penalty to pay

    Law

  • 67

    Documents that allows a person to make ger wishes regarding healtcare known to family members and health care workers in case the time comes when she is no longer able to kake those wishes known herself

    Advance Directives

  • 68

    What are the two types of Legal and Ethical Terminologies

    Durable Power of Attorney (DPA) and Living will

  • 69

    A legal document that gives the responsibility for making decisions on the person's behalf to someone else, such as family members.

    Durable Power Of attorney

  • 70

    Health care proxy for the patient that provider should prescribe more decision

    Durable Power of Attorney

  • 71

    Legal document that gives specific directions about whay steps the healthcare team should or should not take to prolong person's life when death seems near

    Living will

  • 72

    Basic documents that communicate patient wishes regarding medical treatment

    Living Will

  • 73

    A person is liable for the wrongful act, whethere done accidentally or intentinally s

    Tort Governs the Remedies for Civil Wrongs

  • 74

    A wrongful act other than a breach of contract for which relief may be obtained in the form of damages or an injunction

    Tort Governs the remedies for civil wrongs

  • 75

    Occurs when someone causes harms or injury to another person property without intent to cause harm

    Unintentional Tort

  • 76

    Failure to do what a reasonable and careful person would be expected to do in each situation

    Negligence

  • 77

    Negligence by a professional person

    Malpractice

  • 78

    A violation or civil law commited by a person with the intent to do harm

    Intentional Tort

  • 79

    An action that causes a person a fear being touched in a harmful or unwelcome way

    Assault

  • 80

    Touching another person in a harmful or unwelcome way

    Battery

  • 81

    Confining person againts his ir her will

    False imprisonment

  • 82

    The wilful in infliction of injury or harm another

    Abuse

  • 83

    Deliberately hurting another person's body

    Physical Abuse

  • 84

    Degrading, belittling or threathening another person

    Emotional Abuse

  • 85

    Focing the person to take part in sexual activity of any kind

    Sexual Abuse

  • 86

    Failing to provide for a dependent person's basic needs

    Neglect

  • 87

    Taking or misusing another person's money or assers

    Financial Exploitation

  • 88

    Health care workers are obligated to avoid harming those in their care

    Non-maleficence

  • 89

    means to be answerable to oneself and others for one's own actions

    Accountability

  • 90

    Health care workers are obligated to act in way that promotes the well-being of those in their care

    Beneficence

  • 91

    Every person has the right to make decisions about matters that affect him personally

    Autonomy

  • 92

    Every person has the right to make decisions about matter: s that affect him personally

    Autonomy

  • 93

    All people regardless of race, religion culture, sexual orientation or ability to pay for services-deserve fair and equal treatment

    Justice

  • 94

    Responses should be proportional to the good that can be achieved and the harm that may be caused

    Proportionality

  • 95

    Ethical standards in medical care promote other important moral and social value such as:

    Social Responsibility Human rights Patient's welfare Compliance with the law Patient's safety

  • 96

    Situations arise in health care where there may be more than good or moral solution depending on one's point of view

    Ethical Dilemmas

  • 97

    Making untrue statements that hurts another person's reputation. Typically involves presenting false or accusatory statement as fact

    Defamation

  • 98

    Defined as any deliberate and dishonest act comitted with the knowledge that it could result in an inauthorized benefit to the person commiting the act or someone else who is similarly not entitled to the benefit

    Fraud

  • 99

    Typically defined as an unlawful taking if another individuals propert with the intention to deprive the other person of the property on a permanent basis

    Larceny

  • 100

    Keeping personal information that someone shares with you to yourself

    Confidentiality

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    問題一覧

  • 1

    Assist patients with their day-to-day care. Their duties include helping patients to bathe and get dressed.

    definition of nursing assistant

  • 2

    Utilizes one Rn, one LPN and one CNA to work as a term to care for a group f 9-12 patients

    Nursing Team

  • 3

    carry out the routine work in the general care of patients

    nursing assistant

  • 4

    nursin assitant's task include:

    Serving trays and feeding resident, Helping resident dress and undress, bathing, shaving and shampooing, bedmaking and tidying living areas, measuring the vital sign

  • 5

    NA do not perform

    Inserting or removing tubes Giving tube feeding Changing Sterile dressing Giving medication

  • 6

    Same thing as Nursing Assistant

    Nursing Aide, Patient Care Attendant, Health Care Assistant, Patient Care Technician, Certified Nursing Assistant

  • 7

    Works under the supervision of doctors and Rn's performing duties such as taking vital signs collecting samples

    LPN and LVN

  • 8

    The role requires education in a state- approved program, which will typically last between 12 and 18 months

    LPN and LVN

  • 9

    The largest health care occupation for good reason: they give patients medical care, educate them about their health issues and offer emotional support

    Registered Nurse

  • 10

    Evaluates individual and collective outcomes of patient care provided during their shift, compares patient vare delivery to accepted standards

    Charge Nurse

  • 11

    Primary Task is to provide short-term care for people with severe health issues resulting from injury, disease or genetic anomaly

    Hospital

  • 12

    Referred to as outpatient or same day surgery centres, these facilities offer a safe environment for the surgery

    Ambulatory Surgical Centre

  • 13

    Is designed for patients who require constant care but do not need to be hospitalized and cannot be cared for at home

    Nursing Home

  • 14

    Medical personal onsite 24 hours a day. Skilled Nurses and therapist are on staff to oversee and provide

    Nursing Home

  • 15

    Nursing Home's staff offers help with basic task that can be challenging for individuals with health issues

    Nursing Home

  • 16

    This is the condition of being required to account for one's action

    responsibility

  • 17

    Involves assignment of the performance of activities or task related to patient care to unlicensed assistive personnel while retaining accountability for the outcome

    Delegation

  • 18

    Being responsible to someone, or for some action, and that you are able to explain

    Accountability

  • 19

    5 effective delegation include

    Analyse your task Select the delegate Define the task Provide support Monitor and review

  • 20

    She said "The act of utilizing the invironment of the patients to assist him in his recovery"

    Florence Nightangle

  • 21

    She tended to wounded soldiers at night and was known as "The Lady with the Lamp"

    Florence Nightangle

  • 22

    She is recognized as the founder of modern nursing

    Florence Nightangle

  • 23

    The first nurse theorist well-known for developing the environment

    Florence Nightangle

  • 24

    What is the five environmental Factors of Florence Nightangle

    Fresh Air, Pure water, Efficient Drainage, Sanitation, Direct Sunlight

  • 25

    she define that nursing as the participation if care, core and cure aspects of patient care. a

    Lydia Hall

  • 26

    What is the three model of Lydia Hall

    Care, Core, Cure

  • 27

    The primary role of professional nurse Basic daily biologocal functions as eating, bathing elimination and dressing

    Care.

  • 28

    The patient receiving the nursing care Emphasizes the patent social, emotional and spiritual and intellectual needs

    Core

  • 29

    The administration of medications treatment

    Cure

  • 30

    She said "An interpersonal process of therapeutic interactions between an individual who is sick or in need of help services and a nurse especially educated to recognize respond for the need for help.

    Hildegard Peplau

  • 31

    She has interpersonal Relationship theory

    Hildegard Peplau

  • 32

    What is the for phases of the Therapeutic relationship

    Orientation phase, Identification Phase, Exploitation Phase, resolution

  • 33

    Involves engaging the client in treatment providing explanations and informations and answering question

    Orientation Phase

  • 34

    when the client works interdependently with the nurse, expresses feelings, and begins to feel stronger

    Identification Phase

  • 35

    He was an American psychologist who developed a hierachy of needs to explain human motivation

    Abraham Maslow

  • 36

    His theory suggested that people have several basic needs that must be met before people move up to hierarchy to pursue more social, emotional and self actializing needs

    Abraham Maslow

  • 37

    what is the 5 maslow hierchy of needs

    Physiologcal, Safety, Love belonging, esteem, self actualization

  • 38

    She created the theory of human caring

    Jean Watson

  • 39

    She said "Humans cannot he treated as objects and that humans cannot be seperated from self, other, nature and the large workforce

    Jean Watson

  • 40

    Types of caring factors

    Trust Personal Growth and Practices Inspire Nurture Forgive Open

  • 41

    She has the self care theory

    Dorothea Orem

  • 42

    She said the act if assisting others in the provision and management of self-care to maintain or improve human functioning

    Dorothea Orem

  • 43

    What is the three Orem's Theory

    The Theory Of Self Care The Theory of Self-Care Deficit The Theory od Nursing System

  • 44

    Barriers in the delegate

    Lack of experience, competence, self confidence, incentives, fear of harsh criticism from supervisor, over dependece on the boss, overload of work

  • 45

    The condition of being required to account for one's action

    Resposibility

  • 46

    The Client makes full ise if the services offered

    Exploitation Phase

  • 47

    A set of values, behaviors and relationships that underpins the trust the public has in doctors working in partnership with members of the wider healthcare team

    Professionalism

  • 48

    A healthcare professional is a person trained to work in health or health-related field, In most cases or physical health field.

    Professional

  • 49

    The act behaving properlu for a certain job, a person enagaged or qualified in a profession

    Professional

  • 50

    Professinal attitudes in nursing comprise of inclinations, feelings and emotional conform to their principles and serve as the basis for their behaviors

    Attitude

  • 51

    Professional behavior or behavioural professionalism however is behaving in a manner to achieve optional outcomes

    Attitude

  • 52

    Focuses on the performance or practice of activities of individuals perform their own behalf

    The Theory of Self Care

  • 53

    Which defines when nursing is needed because a person is limited or incapable of providing self care and needs help

    The Theory of Self Care deficit

  • 54

    Focuses on the relationship between a nurse and client and the wholly or partial compensatory nursing system

    The Theory of Nursing System

  • 55

    List of qualities that nursing assistants must have

    Trustworthy, conscientious, courteous, emphatic, accountable

  • 56

    Examples of the job of a CNA requires heavy lifting, CNA's have the right to work in a safe environment.

    Safe work environment

  • 57

    CNAs are generally paid by the hour with the average hourly wage being $11.46 according to 2008 data from the BLS

    Overtime

  • 58

    Cnas have the right to work in an environment that is free from discrimination and harrassment by supervisors, co-workers and patients

    Discrimination/Harrassment

  • 59

    Each states maintains rosters of CNAs who have complaints of abuse or neglect are place on this roster.

    Right to appeal

  • 60

    This neccessitates a review of the incident that initiated the complain and generally ends when the state issues a final report or letter indicatijg its findings and whether the appeal has been accepted

    Right to Appeal

  • 61

    Defines Rn and LVP/LVN and their scope of practices

    Nursing Assistant Acts

  • 62

    Protects the public from persons practicing nursing without a license.

    Nursing Assistants Acts

  • 63

    Simply defined, is a principle that describes what is expected in terms of right and correct and wrong, incorrect in terms and behavior.

    Ethics Definition

  • 64

    Health Care ethics, is the application of the core principles if bioethics, to medical and health care decisions. It is a multidiscriplinary lens through which to view complex issues and make recommendations regarding a course of action

    Ethics Definition

  • 65

    Health Care laws means all applicable current and future laws, rules, regulatoons, codes, ordinances, orders and decrees,

    Law

  • 66

    Designed to prevent harm to others while protecting the rights of individuals. As a healthcare worker ut is your duty to care that if you breach that duty and someone is injured because of that breach, there will be a penalty to pay

    Law

  • 67

    Documents that allows a person to make ger wishes regarding healtcare known to family members and health care workers in case the time comes when she is no longer able to kake those wishes known herself

    Advance Directives

  • 68

    What are the two types of Legal and Ethical Terminologies

    Durable Power of Attorney (DPA) and Living will

  • 69

    A legal document that gives the responsibility for making decisions on the person's behalf to someone else, such as family members.

    Durable Power Of attorney

  • 70

    Health care proxy for the patient that provider should prescribe more decision

    Durable Power of Attorney

  • 71

    Legal document that gives specific directions about whay steps the healthcare team should or should not take to prolong person's life when death seems near

    Living will

  • 72

    Basic documents that communicate patient wishes regarding medical treatment

    Living Will

  • 73

    A person is liable for the wrongful act, whethere done accidentally or intentinally s

    Tort Governs the Remedies for Civil Wrongs

  • 74

    A wrongful act other than a breach of contract for which relief may be obtained in the form of damages or an injunction

    Tort Governs the remedies for civil wrongs

  • 75

    Occurs when someone causes harms or injury to another person property without intent to cause harm

    Unintentional Tort

  • 76

    Failure to do what a reasonable and careful person would be expected to do in each situation

    Negligence

  • 77

    Negligence by a professional person

    Malpractice

  • 78

    A violation or civil law commited by a person with the intent to do harm

    Intentional Tort

  • 79

    An action that causes a person a fear being touched in a harmful or unwelcome way

    Assault

  • 80

    Touching another person in a harmful or unwelcome way

    Battery

  • 81

    Confining person againts his ir her will

    False imprisonment

  • 82

    The wilful in infliction of injury or harm another

    Abuse

  • 83

    Deliberately hurting another person's body

    Physical Abuse

  • 84

    Degrading, belittling or threathening another person

    Emotional Abuse

  • 85

    Focing the person to take part in sexual activity of any kind

    Sexual Abuse

  • 86

    Failing to provide for a dependent person's basic needs

    Neglect

  • 87

    Taking or misusing another person's money or assers

    Financial Exploitation

  • 88

    Health care workers are obligated to avoid harming those in their care

    Non-maleficence

  • 89

    means to be answerable to oneself and others for one's own actions

    Accountability

  • 90

    Health care workers are obligated to act in way that promotes the well-being of those in their care

    Beneficence

  • 91

    Every person has the right to make decisions about matters that affect him personally

    Autonomy

  • 92

    Every person has the right to make decisions about matter: s that affect him personally

    Autonomy

  • 93

    All people regardless of race, religion culture, sexual orientation or ability to pay for services-deserve fair and equal treatment

    Justice

  • 94

    Responses should be proportional to the good that can be achieved and the harm that may be caused

    Proportionality

  • 95

    Ethical standards in medical care promote other important moral and social value such as:

    Social Responsibility Human rights Patient's welfare Compliance with the law Patient's safety

  • 96

    Situations arise in health care where there may be more than good or moral solution depending on one's point of view

    Ethical Dilemmas

  • 97

    Making untrue statements that hurts another person's reputation. Typically involves presenting false or accusatory statement as fact

    Defamation

  • 98

    Defined as any deliberate and dishonest act comitted with the knowledge that it could result in an inauthorized benefit to the person commiting the act or someone else who is similarly not entitled to the benefit

    Fraud

  • 99

    Typically defined as an unlawful taking if another individuals propert with the intention to deprive the other person of the property on a permanent basis

    Larceny

  • 100

    Keeping personal information that someone shares with you to yourself

    Confidentiality