Types of Hospital Diets
Food Allergy, Intolerance, Safety, and Sanitation
Complementary-Alternative Medicine
Nonoral Feeding
Parenteral Nutrition
100

Definition of edentulous.

What is lacking teeth?

100

Most important factors in preventing foodborne illnesses..

What are personal hygiene and hand washing?

100

TCAM stands for...

What is Traditional, Complementary, and Alternative Medicine?
100

Most problems in tube feeding can be prevented by doing this one action...

What are using good hand washing techniques?

100

Parenteral nutrition provides energy and nutrients...

What is intravenously?

200

Clear liquid diets consist of foods the are...

What are clear and liquid at room or body temperature?

200

A nonallergic reaction caused by toxins, drugs, or conditions when consuming certain foods...

What is a food intolerance?

200

Dietary supplements are considered...

What are foods?

200

Patients receiving tube feeding should be positioned like this unless contraindicated...

What is with the head of the bed elevated 30-45 degrees?

200

Definition of CPN, TPN, and PPN...

What are central parenteral nutrition, total parenteral nutrition, and peripheral parenteral nutrition?

300

The two categories of hospital diets.

What are Basic Hospital Diets and Mechanically Altered Diets?

300

To prevent cross-contamination, refrigerators on nursing units should not mix...

What are drugs, staff foods, and patient foods?

300

Functional foods contain...

What are physiologically active substances?
300

The three methods of administering formula...

What are continuous infusion, intermittent infusion, and bolus feeding?

300
Solutions must be in this state when administering via peripheral veins...

What is isotonic?

400
This diet order provides an excellent opportunity for collaboration by the nurse, dietitian, and patient to plan and provide food that is eaten, tolerated, and nourishing while observing the progression of the patient.

What is Diet as tolerated?

400

The eight foods that are major triggers of food allergies or intolerance in adults...

What are eggs, milk, wheat, soy, fish, shellfish, peanuts, and tree nuts?

400

Complementary medicine refers to...

What is non-Western healing approaches used at the same time as conventional medicine?

400

Enteral feeding should be used over parenteral nutrition...

What is if the GI tract is functional, accessible, and safe to use

400

Components of parenteral nutrition solutions...

What are water, amino acids, dextrose, electrolytes, vitamins, and trace elements?

500

Important nutrients that must be planned in vegetarian diet.

What are protein, vitamins B12 and D, iron, zinc, iodine, and calcium?

500

The five microbes that are top causes of food poisoning...

What are norovirus, Salmonella, Clostridium perfringens, Campylobacter spp., and Staphylococcus aureus?

500

If a claim is made by a dietary supplement, this statement must be included on the label.

What is "This statement has not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease."?

500

Routes for tube feeding...

What are nasogastric, nasoduodenal, nasojejunal, esophagostomy, gastrostomy, and jejunostomy.

500

Factors to consider before initiating CPN...

What are nature of the patient's GI dysfunction, severity of malnutrition, degree of hyper catabolism, medical prognosis, and wishes?

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