Vulnerability and Empowerment
Stress & Coping
Addiction
Anxiety
Kitchen Sink
100

This term describes a group or individual at higher risk for poor health outcomes due to social, economic, or environmental factors.

What is vulnerability?

100

List three physiological symptoms of the sympathetic nervous system response

Increased heart rate, HTN, increased cardiac output, increased blood glucose, immunosuppression, urinary retention

100

This neurotransmitter is heavily involved in the brain’s reward and pleasure pathways, and its dysregulation contributes to addictive behaviors. 

What is dopamine?

100

When anxiety becomes excessive, persistent, and interferes with daily functioning for at least six months, it may be diagnosed as this disorder.

What is generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)?

100

A nurse collaborates with local policymakers to increase access to vaccinations in underserved neighborhoods. This represents this level of intervention.

What is systems-level intervention?

200

This wedge of the Minnesota Intervention Wheel involves ongoing, systematic collection and analysis of health data to detect trends, monitor disease, and guide public health action.

What is surveillance?

200

List 2 reasons why individuals or populations might be at higher risk for maladaptive coping 

They have previous trauma

ACES scores are high

They have impaired cognition

200

This medication is commonly prescribed to help reduce alcohol cravings and should not be used during pregnancy.

What is acamprosate?

200

Patients on  benzodiazepines should be educated to avoid other CNS depressants, such as these common substances (list 2).

What are alcohol, opioids, or sleep medications?

200

This concept refers to the patient’s perception of their ability to successfully perform a behavior.

What is self-efficacy.

300

In mass casualty triage, this color tag indicates immediate priority, meaning the client has life-threatening injuries but a high chance of survival with rapid intervention.

What is red?

300

A client with chronic illness states, “I just can’t manage all my appointments, medications, and diet.” The nurse encourages the client to prioritize tasks and use a planner, illustrating this type of coping strategy.

What is problem-focused coping?

300

This life-threatening complication of alcohol withdrawal typically occurs 48–72 hours after the last drink and is characterized by severe agitation, confusion, hallucinations, tremors, and autonomic hyperactivity.

What is delirium tremens (DTs)?

300

Risk factors for anxiety include family history, chronic illness, trauma exposure, and high scores on this childhood assessment tool.

What is the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE's)?
300

This physiological concept explains why prolonged stress can contribute to hypertension, immunosuppression, and metabolic disorders.

What is allostatic load?

400

This type of power involves controlling or dominating others, while this type emphasizes collaboration, shared decision-making, and mutual influence. (two terms for full points)

What are “power over” and “power with”?

400

This is an example of an ego defense mechanism: A client's is being transferred to a new job in a city far away from her close friends. She copes with her anxiety by explaining to her friends the advantages associated with the move.

What is intellectualization? 

Intellectualization: An attempt to avoid expressing actual emotions associated with a stressful situation by using the intellectual processes of logic, reasoning, & analysis.

400

A client taking disulfiram must avoid all sources of alcohol, including cough syrup, aftershave, and sauces, because ingestion can trigger this reaction. List two symptoms associated with this reaction. (answer both for full points)

What is a disulfiram-alcohol reaction?

  • Flushing of the face and neck, Nausea and vomiting, Headache, Sweating, Palpitations or tachycardia, Hypotension (low blood pressure) or dizziness, Shortness of breath or chest discomfort, Anxiety or a sense of impending doom

400

This nursing approach emphasizes safety, trustworthiness, choice, collaboration, and empowerment.

What is trauma-informed care?

400

This phase of the disaster management cycle occurs immediately after a disaster, focusing on life-saving interventions, emergency care, and rapid deployment of resources to affected populations.

What is the response phase?

500

This term describes differences in health outcomes between populations, while this other term refers to unjust, avoidable differences in health caused by social, economic, or environmental disadvantages. (Two terms for full points)

What are health disparities? 

What are health inequities?

500

During this stage of the General Adaptation Syndrome, the body activates the sympathetic nervous system to prepare for fight-or-flight.

What is the alarm stage?


500

The following effects of alcohol intoxication fall along a continuum from a low blood-alcohol level to a high blood-alcohol level.  List the effects in order of the blood-alcohol level at which they occur, from low to high.

  • Euphoria
  • Respiratory depression
  • Motor clumsiness
  • Emotional outbursts
  • Respiratory arrest


Ans: Euphoria (0.05%), motor clumsiness (0.08%), emotional outbursts (0.2%), respiratory depression (0.4%), respiratory arrest (0.5%)

500

Describe the mechanism of action of benzodiazepines and two indications for benzodiazepine use. (Answer both for full points)

Benzodiazepines enhance the inhibitory effects of GABA resulting in CNS depression

Anxiety, insomnia, seizures, muscle spasticity, alcohol withdrawal, anesthesia

500

A public health nurse uses the MIW to plan a smoking cessation program targeting pregnant women in a low-income neighborhood with the use of social marketing campaign. This illustrates the integration of which two wedges?

Social marketing & health education