Critical Thinking
Ethics
Advocacy
Conflict
Potpourri
100
Name 1 Authoritative Interventions from Herons Model of Communication
What is prescriptive, informative, & confronting
100
Document that states the Professional values held in common by members of the nursing profession
What is The Code of Ethics
100
Define the term advocacy
What is “the act or process of supporting a cause or proposal”
100
This defense mechanism consists of reverting to an earlier, more primitive and childlike pattern of behavior
What is Regression
100
This medical term is used to describe the process of “making up a story” to fill in missing pieces when the patient cannot recall what happened.
What is confabulation
200
Critical thinking is known as ________ thinking.
What is active
200
This ethical principle is the term used which means to “do no harm”
What is non-maleficence
200
Who can be an advocate?
Who are the Nurse, Patient, Family members, Other health care professionals- OT, PT, Another patient
200
Conflict within oneself is called…
What is intrapersonal conflict
200
Who is known as the "The Lady With the Lamp"
What is Florence Nightingale
300
Barriers to critical thinking?
What is anxiety, habits, language, self-concept, cultural, generational
300
Patients admitted to a Mental Health unit can prepare these legal documents that will express their treatment choices.
What is an Advance Psychiatric Directives
300
Facilitators to Patient Advocacy
What is the Nurse-patient relationship, Recognizing and paying attention to patients' needs and conditions, Nurses' responsibility, Physician as colleague, Nurses' knowledge and skills
300
After being told that his liver enzymes have Become elevated, the patient says nothing…But then drives home with the car radioBlaring, speeding, and running a red Light. The patient is using ___________
What is Displacement
300
Nurse Wald, a mentor to Margaret Sanger, advocated for the needs of the poor who lived in the Lower East Side Tenement buildings. She created a community “settlement” named after this street where it was located.
What is the Henry Street
400
State 2 "Elements of Thought"
What is purpose, question, information, interpretation, concepts, assumptions, implications & consequences, & point of view
400
Provide a clinical ethical example
What is DNR, abortion, end of life care, quality of life, etc..
400
This woman was an nurse advocate who was instrumental in establishing the organization that later became known as Planned Parenthood
Who is Margaret Sanger?
400
This type of communication denotes the actual feelings that an individual has (even if it contradicts what they say aloud on the surface)
What is latent communication
400
Name 3 things that can effect communication
What is age, gender, culture, environment, social class, location, personal factors, self-awareness
500
Name 2 successfully interventions when communicating with a patient with dementia
What is Look directly at the client when talking, Simplify the environment, Refer to client by surname (Mrs. Jones), Minimize anything in the environment that creates anxiety, Communicate with touch, smiles, calmness
500
In addition to championing social justice in the provision of health care, and acting on behalf of patients, what else do Bu & Jezewski identify as a core attribute of advocacy in nursing?
What is safeguarding patients’ autonomy
500
Give an example of a vulnerable population
• Veterans • Elderly • Individuals with a criminal background • Individuals with disabilities • Children in abusive families
500
Conflict within the profession of nursing
What is role conflict, horizontal conflict, with other healthcare professionals, patients, families, & generational differences
500
Initially the most powerful influence on our ethical comfort zone
What is our family
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