Fundamentals of Nursing Concepts, Standards, & Practice
Ethics & Law
More Ethics & Law
Therapeutic Communication
Safety & Fall Prevention
100

Nursing is both of these things, as well as it requires compassion and evidence-based practice

What is an art and a science?

100

The patient's right to make his/her own decisions

What is Autonomy?

100

The law that requires institutions to provide written information to patients concerning their rights to make decisions about their care, including their right to refuse treatment. 

What is the patient self-determination act?
100

A communication technique that is NOT therapeutic

What is sharing opinions?

100

A factor most likely to increase a stroke patient's risk for falls

What is Unilateral weakness?

200

This approach puts the patient at the center of nursing practice with varying needs and expectations.

What is patient-centered care/approach?

200

The concept of taking positive actions to help patients

What is beneficence?

200

An act or failure to act that is not considered an intentional tort in nursing

What is negligence?

200

Telling a cancer patient that "everything will be ok", is this non-therapeutic communication technique

What is False Reassurance?
200

Defined by the WHO as the prevention of errors and adverse effects to patients associated w/healthcare

What is Patient Safety?

300

According to Benner's model, this type of nurse has been a nurse for 2-3 years and can anticipate nursing care needs.

What is a competent nurse?

300

The ethical concept addressed by HIPAA law

What is confidentiality?

300

The licensure agreement among states that allows nurses to practice in multiple states under the same license

What is the Nurse Licensure Compact?

300

A communication technique that involves restating a person's message, but more briefly in your own words

What is Paraphrasing?
300

A primary recommendation for older adult drivers to promote safety

What is having yearly eye exams?

400

The nursing role that involves protecting patient's human and legal rights. 

What is Advocate?

400

This group aims to set guiding principles and standards of behavior for the nursing profession

What is the American Nurses Association?

400
This requires the physician to provide an explanation to the patient of a procedure along with requiring the nurse to be present and sign as a witness.

What is informed consent?

400

The phase of the nurse-patient relationship that involves reminding the patient that the end of the relationship is near and evaluating achievement of expected outcomes.

What is the Termination Phase?

400

The priority assessment when assessing a stroke patient for home safety

What is Gait & Mobility?

500

A statement of philosophical ideals of right and wrong that define principles for care

What is The Nursing Code of Ethics?

500

Access to healthcare is directly related to the concept of which ethical principle?

What is Justice?

500

Known as what a reasonably prudent nurse would do under similar circumstances

What is Standard of Proof?

500

The practice of encouraging patients to share thoughts with the aim of changing behavior

What is motivational interviewing?

500

Keeping the hospital bed in low position when a patient is resting

 Maintaining call light within reach

Keeping wheelchair wheel locks in "locked" position when stationary

are all examples of 

What are Universal Fall Precautions?