Three interventions that reduce falls in the older adult population
What are Bed alarms, fall socks, clear path, lighting, assistive devices, fall socks, armband, no rugs, no cords, railings, non-slip tubs, avoiding high climbing?
Blood pressure, skin rash, heart rate
What is objective data
The duty to tell the truth.
What is Veracity
Primary intervention for patients with limited English proficiency.
What is use of an interpreter?
What is the nurse's priority for a client with sensory deficits?
What is assess for use of assistive devices?
Population with high risk for STI's, anemia, motor vehicle accidents that requires education to promote health.
What are adolescents?
Generation that has the responsibility of caring for parents and their children simultaneously.
What is the sandwich generation
Gender, age, family history
What are non-modifiable health risks?
A nurse that returns to administer pain medication as promised is participating in this ethical principle.
What is fidelity?
Four levels of prevention
What are primordial, primary, secondary, and tertiary?
A client needs a referral for outpatient assistance with wound care services. What interdisciplinary team member would the referral be given to?
Who is the case manager or social worker?
The theory of cognitive development looks at how someone thinks, reasons, and perceives the world
What is Piaget's Theory?
Using Ericksons theory of development, this is the stage of development for middle-adulthood.
What is Generativity vs. Stagnation?
Regulates the scope of nursing practice and protects public health, safety, and welfare.
What is the Nurse Practice Act?
A tool used to provide clear communication during hand-off and notification of abnormal findings during the nursing process.
What is the ISBAR or SBAR?
The highest priority for the nurse when using Maslow's hierarchy of needs.
What is the physiological level/stage?
This type of questioning supports the nurse-client relationship by using therapeutic communication.
What are open-ended questions?
The focus of Kohlberg's theory.
What is moral development?
This is recommended for the older client to improve their cognitive/mental state.
What are memory activities ie:crossword puzzles, trivia, soduko?
This stage of the clinical judgement model where the nurse identifies expected outcomes and describes interventions for the expected outcomes
What is generating solutions?
A published guide used to establish moral values of the nursing profession used in decision making.
What is the American Nurses Association (ANA) Code of Ethics?
2 heterosexual parents, 1 biological child, an uncle and a cousin living in the same house.
What is an extended family?
The learning domain in which a nurse uses role-play to get the client to make changes to their diet through the use of emotional changes.
What is affective learning domain?
Potentially traumatic events that occur in childhood (0-17 years).
What are adverse childhood experiences (ACE)?
Assessment tool used to identify high risk health outcomes in the older population
What is the SPICES tool? -Sleep, problems eating or swallowing, incontinence, confusion, evidence of falls, skin breakdown
Care for students, care for community, care for partners.
What is the Chamberlain Cares model?
A client is trying to reduce salt intake and has purchased different salt substitutes for cooking. What stage of the transtheoretical theory does this demonstrate?
What is preparation?
This type of healthcare aims for a multidisciplinary, coordinated approach between several different providers and institutions acting together to care for the whole person. Complementary and conventional approaches are used.
What is integrative healthcare?
Facial expressions, posture, sounds, body movements.
What is non-verbal communication?
7 Stages of Erickson's theory in order
What is:
Trust vs mistrust
Autonomy vs shame/doubt
Initiative vs guilt
Industry vs inferiority
Intimacy vs isolation
Generativity vs stagnation
Ego integrity vs despair