History & Foundations
Epidemiology 101
Prevention & Assessment
Disasters & Emergencies
Vulnerability & Policy
100

She is recognized as the founder of modern nursing and focused on environmental sanitation to improve patient outcomes

Who is Florence Nightingale

100

These three elements make up the Epidemiological Triangle

What are the Agent, Host, and Environment

100

Providing influenza assessments or teaching nutrition to healthy adolescents are examples of this level of prevention

What is primary prevention

100

In mass casualty triage, a patient who is "walking wounded" would receive this color tag

What is green

100

According to ATI, this is the fasting growing segment of the homeless population

Who are families with children

200

This historical figure is known as the founder of public health nursing

Who is Lillian Wald

200

This measure refers to the total number of existing cases of a disease in a population at a specific point in time.

What is prevalence

200

This level of prevention focuses on early detection and limiting the severity of a disease, such as lead screening or TB testing

What is secondary prevention

200

This is the highest priority category for biological agents that post a risk to national security, such as anthrax and smallpox

What is category A

200

This federally managed insurance program covers adults 65 and older or those with certain disabilities

What is Medicare

300

This pioneer in epidemiology traced a cholera outbreak to a specific water pump in the 1800s

Who is Dr John Snow

300

This term describes the number of newly diagnosed cases of a disease over a period of time

what is incidence

300

Maximizing recovery after an illness or injury has occurred, such as through physical therapy or support groups, is this level of prevention

What is tertiary prevention

300

During this phase of disaster management cycle, the nurse identifies community vulnerabilities and creates evacuation plans

What is the Prevention/Mitigation phase

300

This is the recommended readability level for written health education materials to ensure literacy for most clients

What is 6th to 8th grade

400

These are the three core functions of public health nursing

What is assessment, Policy Development and Assurance

400

This term refers to the ability of a screening test to correctly identify those who do have a disease (a "true positive")

What is sensitivity

400

This assessment method involves the nurse driving through a community to observe ethnicity, housing quality, and public safety

What is a windshield survey

400

This triage tag is reserved for those who are deceased or have a minimal chance of survival

What is black

400

These are external factors like education access, economic stability, and housing that influence overall health oucomes

What are the Social Determinants of Health (SDOH)

500

This ethical principal advocates for the fair distribution of benefits and burdens in society based on needs

What is distributive justice

500

A nurse follows a group of healthy teenagers for 10 years to study the long-term effects of vaping; name this study design

What is prospective cohort study

500

This mnemonic is used by nurses to assess potential environmental exposure in a client's history

What is "I PREPARE"

500

This medication is used for the prophylactic treatment of community members exposed to anthrax

What is ciprofloxacin

500

This legal obligation requires nurses to report suspected cases of child or elder abuse to authorities

What is mandatory reporting

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