New Workbook
問題一覧
1
Provide personal care and assistance with daily activities, support mobility, monitor clients' condition and vital signs, follow care plans, communicate with the care team, and document care.
2
Federal government and provincial/territorial governments.
3
Hospitals, long-term care or nursing homes, and home/community care.
4
Acting with respect, honesty, confidentiality, integrity, and putting the client's best interests and rights first.
5
A client's voluntary agreement to a treatment or care after being given understandable information about risks, benefits, and alternatives.
6
Health is a state of physical, mental, and social well-being; illness is a disruption of that state with signs or symptoms of disease.
7
It ensures respectful, effective care by recognizing and responding to clients' cultural beliefs, values, and communication needs.
8
Heavy workload and emotional demands of caring for ill or dying clients.
9
Fully concentrating, understanding, responding, and remembering what the speaker says, using verbal and nonverbal feedback.
10
Teamwork improves patient safety and care quality by coordinating skills, sharing information, and supporting each other.
11
Clear limits that define appropriate relationships and behaviour between caregivers and clients to maintain safety, respect, and trust.
12
Physical abuse, emotional/psychological abuse, and financial abuse.
13
Ensure the client's safety, report to the appropriate authority or supervisor, document observations, and follow facility policies and legal requirements.
14
Use a stable base, bend at the knees, keep the back straight, hold the load close, and use leg muscles or mechanical lifts to avoid strain.
15
Mobility prevents complications like pressure ulcers and pneumonia, maintains muscle strength and independence, and improves circulation and mood.
16
Care focused on helping clients regain or maintain skills and independence through rehabilitation, exercises, and adaptive strategies.
17
Bathing/showering, oral care (brushing teeth), and grooming (hair care, nail care).
18
To prevent the spread of infectious agents, protect clients and staff, and reduce illness and healthcare-associated infections.
19
Practices like handwashing with soap and water or using alcohol-based hand rub to remove or kill microbes and prevent infection spread.
20
Slips, trips and falls; and improper handling of sharps or contaminated materials.
21
Measurements that indicate the body's essential functions, such as temperature, pulse (heart rate), respiration (breathing rate), and blood pressure.
22
Temperature, pulse (heart rate), respiration (breathing rate), and blood pressure.
23
It ensures continuity of care, legal protection, clear communication among the care team, and accurate records of the client's condition and interventions.
24
Balanced intake of carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals, adequate fluids, and appropriate portion sizes to meet individual needs.
25
The involuntary leakage of urine or loss of bladder control.
26
Prolonged pressure, friction, or shear on skin, often combined with immobility and poor circulation, leading to tissue damage.
27
A progressive decline in cognitive function affecting memory, thinking, judgment, and daily functioning, not a normal part of aging.
28
Persistent sadness, loss of interest in activities, changes in appetite or sleep, fatigue, and difficulty concentrating.
29
To provide supplemental oxygen to improve oxygenation in people with low blood oxygen levels or respiratory distress.
30
Care that focuses on relieving symptoms, pain, and stress of serious illness to improve quality of life for patients and their families, at any disease stage.
問題一覧
1
Provide personal care and assistance with daily activities, support mobility, monitor clients' condition and vital signs, follow care plans, communicate with the care team, and document care.
2
Federal government and provincial/territorial governments.
3
Hospitals, long-term care or nursing homes, and home/community care.
4
Acting with respect, honesty, confidentiality, integrity, and putting the client's best interests and rights first.
5
A client's voluntary agreement to a treatment or care after being given understandable information about risks, benefits, and alternatives.
6
Health is a state of physical, mental, and social well-being; illness is a disruption of that state with signs or symptoms of disease.
7
It ensures respectful, effective care by recognizing and responding to clients' cultural beliefs, values, and communication needs.
8
Heavy workload and emotional demands of caring for ill or dying clients.
9
Fully concentrating, understanding, responding, and remembering what the speaker says, using verbal and nonverbal feedback.
10
Teamwork improves patient safety and care quality by coordinating skills, sharing information, and supporting each other.
11
Clear limits that define appropriate relationships and behaviour between caregivers and clients to maintain safety, respect, and trust.
12
Physical abuse, emotional/psychological abuse, and financial abuse.
13
Ensure the client's safety, report to the appropriate authority or supervisor, document observations, and follow facility policies and legal requirements.
14
Use a stable base, bend at the knees, keep the back straight, hold the load close, and use leg muscles or mechanical lifts to avoid strain.
15
Mobility prevents complications like pressure ulcers and pneumonia, maintains muscle strength and independence, and improves circulation and mood.
16
Care focused on helping clients regain or maintain skills and independence through rehabilitation, exercises, and adaptive strategies.
17
Bathing/showering, oral care (brushing teeth), and grooming (hair care, nail care).
18
To prevent the spread of infectious agents, protect clients and staff, and reduce illness and healthcare-associated infections.
19
Practices like handwashing with soap and water or using alcohol-based hand rub to remove or kill microbes and prevent infection spread.
20
Slips, trips and falls; and improper handling of sharps or contaminated materials.
21
Measurements that indicate the body's essential functions, such as temperature, pulse (heart rate), respiration (breathing rate), and blood pressure.
22
Temperature, pulse (heart rate), respiration (breathing rate), and blood pressure.
23
It ensures continuity of care, legal protection, clear communication among the care team, and accurate records of the client's condition and interventions.
24
Balanced intake of carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals, adequate fluids, and appropriate portion sizes to meet individual needs.
25
The involuntary leakage of urine or loss of bladder control.
26
Prolonged pressure, friction, or shear on skin, often combined with immobility and poor circulation, leading to tissue damage.
27
A progressive decline in cognitive function affecting memory, thinking, judgment, and daily functioning, not a normal part of aging.
28
Persistent sadness, loss of interest in activities, changes in appetite or sleep, fatigue, and difficulty concentrating.
29
To provide supplemental oxygen to improve oxygenation in people with low blood oxygen levels or respiratory distress.
30
Care that focuses on relieving symptoms, pain, and stress of serious illness to improve quality of life for patients and their families, at any disease stage.