Healthcare Delivery & Economics
Levels of
Healthcare
Nursing Process & Decision Making
Medication
Administration
Bowel
Elimination
Admission, Transfer and Discharge
Wound Care
100

Long-term care facilities

Assisted living facilities

Memory care facilities 

Independent living facilities

What are examples of Residential Care Facilities?

100

To threaten a patient with harm or to show intent to touch him or her without permission.

What is assault?

100

Using skillful reasoning and logical thought to determine the merits of a belief or action. 

What is critical thinking skill?

100

Right: Medication, Dose, Route, Patient, Indication, Date & Time, Documentation.

What are the 7 rights of medication administration?

100

Normal, Hypoactive, Hyperactive, Borborygmi

What are bowel sounds?

100

Shortly after admission

When does a nurse start discharge planning?   

100

First Intention, Second Intention, Third Intention

What are the types of wound closures for healing?

200

An interdisciplinary program of palliative care and support services that addresses the physical, spiritual, social, and economic needs of terminally ill patients and their families.

What is Hospice? 

200

Intentional and wrongful physical contact without consent that causes injury or offensive touching.

What is battery?

200

A decision making framework used by all nurses to determine the needs of their patients and to decide how to care for them. 

What is the nursing process? 

200

Verify the medication, dose, route, patient, indication, date, and time as you remove the medication from pyxis.

Verify the medication, dose, and route against the MAR Prior to placing it in the medication cup.

Verify at the patient bedside.

What are the safety checks of medication administration?

200

Test performed to determine the presence of occult blood.

What is the guaiac test?

200

"Leaving against medical advice"

What is AMA?

200

A channel or tunnel that develops between two cavities or between an infected cavity and the surface of the skin. 

What is a sinus tract?

300

The federal government's health insurance program for people older than 65 years. 

What is Medicare?

300

Deals with claims of injury or harm due to someone else's actions.

Ex. malpractice, negligence, false imprisonment

What is tort law?

300

A documented plan for giving patient care and includes the health-care provider's orders, nursing diagnoses, and nursing orders. 

What is a care plan?

300

Sublingual route, buccal route, 

What are oral routes of medication administration/ 

300

Apples, unpeeled; Corn, Cabbage, Carrots, Broccoli

Beans, Blueberries, Raisins, Prunes, Sunflower seeds, whole-grain cereals

What are high fiber foods?

300

Fear, Anxiety, Loss of control, and Loss of Identity

What are common reactions to admission?

300

Involve full-thickness tissue loss but are impossible to accurately stage due to the wound bed being obscured by eschar or excessive slough. 

What is an unstageable injury?

400

A federal-state program in which the federal government helps states pay for the health care of those with an income below the poverty level as well as certain other individuals. 

What is Medicaid?

400

Unusual occurrence reports or variance reports.

Not recorded in pt's chart, factual & object, without impressions, assumptions, or conclusions.

What is incident reports?

400

Subjective and objective findings.

What is assessment?

400

Sterile (Aseptic) technique  is required and the bag of solution must be changed every 24 hours. 

What is Parenteral nutrition?

400

Milk and molasses must be heated together to mix well, and then must be cooled to body temperature before administration.

What is a milk and molasses enema?

400

Obtaining a physician's order, notifying the business office, reconciling the client's medications, assisting the client's to gather personal belongings and valuables, teaching, notifying housekeeping

What is the discharge process? 

400
Stage 1, Stage 2, Stage 3, Stage 4 , unstageable, and deep tissue pressure injuries.

What are the staging pressure injuries?

500

Living Will

Durable Power of Attorney

Do-Not-Attempt-Resuscitation Order (DNAR)

What are End-of-Life Documentation?

500

Classifications of illnesses and diseases are used to determine the amount of money paid by Medicare to the hospital for a care of a patient with that particular illness or disease. 

What are diagnosis-related groups (DRGs)?

500

A formulation of nursing diagnoses through an analysis of the assessment information that you have gathered. 

What is a diagnosis?

500

Date & time of the order, name of medication, dosage of medication, frequency for taking the mediation, route of administration, patient's name, specific reason for administrating the medication, signature of the prescriber. 

What all medication orders must have?

500

Works by distending the colon and by irritating the walls of the colon, which further increases peristalsis.

What is a Soapsuds enema?

500

Applying identifications bands; assisting the patient to change into a hospital gown or pajamas; orienting the patient and family to the environment; taking an inventory of clothing, personal items, and valuables.

What is the admission process?

500

Sacrum, buttocks, greater trochanters, elbows, heels, ankles, occiput and scapulae.

What are common sites for development of pressure injuries?

600

Denial

Anger

Bargaining

Depression

Acceptance

What are the Kubler-Ross's Rive Stages of Grief in Death and Dying?

600

A label or statement for a problem that a patient is experiencing as a result of his or her medical diagnoses.  

What is a nursing diagnoses?

600

The process of determining priorities and what nursing actions should be performed to help resolve or manage each patient problem.

What is planning? 

600

______ effects are mild and expected, where as _______effects are more severe and harmful.

What are side effects and adverse effect?

600

Sims

What position to place patient in for administration of an enema?

600

The categorization of a group of people by a distinctive trait, such as the line of genealogy or ancestry, race, or nationality.

What is ethnicity?

600

It occurs when there is a partial or complete separation of the outer layers of a wound.

What is dehiscence?