Which nurse is the founder of nursing and advocated for the improvement of mental health care for women?
What is Dorothea Dix ?
Place the patient in a private room, wear PPE whenever you enter the room for all interactions that may involve contact; change gloves after contact remove before leaving the room.
What is Contact Precaution?
Protected from potential or actual harm. Nurses carry out a wide variety of activities to meet patient's physical, and safety needs.
What is Safety and Security Needs?
Patient denies the reality of death and may regress what is discussed.
What is Denial?
Neuroendocrine activity returns to normal local adaptive syndrome coping and defense mechanism.
What is the Stage of Resistance?
Seek not to cause harm,. see to prevent harm or risk of harm whenever possible.
What is Nonmaleficence?
In reviewing the ABG the ph 7.32, PaCO2 48mmHg and the HCO3 is 23mEq/l .
What is Metabolic Acidosis?
This is understanding and acceptance of others in both giving and receiving love and the feeling of belonging such as families, peers, friends, a neighborhood, and a community.
What is Love and Belonging Needs?
The patient has accepted the reality of death and is prepared to die.
What is Acceptance?
Exhibit vasodilation, increase blood pressure, increase pulse, and respirations panic, crisis.
What is stage of Exhaustion?
Which nursing pioneer establish the Red Cross in the United States 1882?
Who is Clara Barton?
This type of charting centers on a client's specific problem. When using DAR charting three areas that are required for documentation are data, action, and response.
What is Focus Charting?
The highest level on the hierarchy which include the need of people to reach their full potential through development of their unique capabilities.
What is Self-Actualization Needs?
The patient expresses rage and hostility and adopts a why me? attitude.
What is Anger?
The acronym nurses remember the order of actions to take in the event of a fire?
What is RACE?
Temporary relief for caregivers who care for disabled or chronically ill clients. It allows the caregiver an opportunity to complete errands and personal business, as well as time to recover both emotional and physical.
What is Respite Care?
The curvature of the spine which contribute to older adult appearance of leaning forward and can limit to respiratory ventilation.
What is Kyphosis?
These needs are common to all people and is essential for the health and survival of all people.
What is Basic Human Needs?
The patient goes through a period of grief before death, crying, and not speaking much.
What is Depression?
What is Local Adaptation syndrome?
Utilize to resolve ethical dilemmas in the health care settings.
What is Hospital Ethics Committee?
Incomplete expansion or collapse of alveoli with retained mucus that involves a portion of the lung and results in poor gas exchange.
What is Atelectasis?
These needs are basic, oxygen, water food, elimination, etc they are of life and therefore the highest of priority .
What is Physiologic Needs?
Anyone 18 yrs. or older, appoints a health representative for instructions for future treatment of their care not a guide for emergency medical personnel.
What is Advance Directives?
Go through the normal development from birth to old age within each stage certain tasks must be resolved to reduce stress.
What is Developmental Stress?