Who established the first training school for nurses?
Who is Florence Nightingale?
The most important concept of the nursing theory.
The person/individual
A state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, not merely the absence of disease or infirmity is known as?
What is health?
What are the four community factors that influence health?
-Social Support
-Community Health Care Structure
-Economic Resources
-Environmental Factors
What is altruism?
What are the four aims of your nursing practice?
What is to promote health, prevent illness, restore health and facilitate coping with dying and death.
What source of knowledge comes from an expert, accepted as truth based on a person's perceived expertise?
What is authoritative?
What are the four stages of illness behavior?
What is ...
Stage 1: symptoms
Stage 2: sick role
Stage 3: dependent role
Stage 4: recovery and rehabilitation
A family that includes aunts, uncles, and grandparents is known as?
How many Basic Tenets of Bills of Rights for RN's are there?
7
A cumulative state of frustration with the work environment that develops over a long period of time is called?
What is Burnout?
What type of reasoning examines general ideas and considers specific actions or ideas?
What is deductive reasoning?
Beginning after an illness is diagnosed and treated, with the goal of reducing disability and helping rehabilitate patients to a maximum level of functioning is what type of health promotion?
What is tertiary?
According to Maslow's hierarchy of needs; what physiologic needs do we have?
Autonomy
A loss of satisfaction for providing good quality patient care is known as?
What is compassion fatigue?
What type of research was developed by the discipline of anthropology, ethnographic research, and is used to examine issues of a culture that are of interest to nursing?
What is ethnography?
What type of health promotion focuses on screening for early detection of disease with prompt diagnosis and treatment if any is found?
What is secondary?
According to Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, what does it mean to meet our self-actualization needs?
What is acceptance of ourselves and others, respect for all people, ability to be objective etc
Not causing your patient harm is known as?
Nonmaleficence
What is ADPIE?
The problem-solving approach to making clinical decisions using the best evidence available. It blends both the science and the art of nursing so that the best patient outcomes are achieved.
Who developed and illustrated how people interact with their environment as they pursue health?
Who is Pender?
What are the five functions of a family?
Physical, economic, affective and coping, reproductive and socialization.
List at least 4 of the following examples of ethical problems.
-Deception
-Invasion of Privacy
-Breach of Confidentiality
-Allocation of scarce nursing resources
-Conflicts concerning new technologies
-End-of-life issues
-Beginning-of-life issues
-Short staffing
-Whistle Blowing
-Unprofessional, incompetent, unethical or illegal nurse practice.