These 2 events led to the development of the profession of PT.
What is WW1 and the polio epidemic.
Suffix that means inflammation.
What is "-itis"?
The ability to imagine oneself in another’s place, to understand another’s feelings, ideas, desires and actions
What is empathy?
The federal legislations which protects a patients private health information.
What is HIPPA? Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
Examples include exercise, gait training, transfers and patient education.
What is an intervention?
A set of congruent behaviors, attitudes, and policies that come together in a system, agency, or among professionals that enables effective work in cross-cultural situations
What is cultual competency?
The first group of people that provided physical therapy services.
Who are reconstuction aides?
The opposite directional term to anterior.
What is posterior?
The tone, volume, and appropriate use of humor during patient care.
What are components of verbal communication?
Individual identifiers (name, address) and past provision of healthcare.
What are personal health information (PHI)?
Obtaining and reviewing patient history, performing a systems review and various tests and measures, to collect meaningful data on the patient’s functional abilities.
What is an examination?
Creating neighborhoods and environments that promote health and safety.
The SDOH goal of neighborhoods and built environments?
The list of values which guide the behaviors of PTs and PTAs to provide the highest quality of care.
What are the Core Values for the PTA and PTA?
The word root meaning "sense of pain".
What is alges-o?
Eye contact, personal space and physical appearance.
What are components of non-verbal communication?
Understanding of education, current skill sets, communication style and roles and responsibilities.
What is required for effective PT/PTA communication?
Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression and Acceptance
What are the stages of grief?
Possessing a set of skills and/or resources to use to function effectively in interactions with those of varying cultural backgrounds.
What is competence in the development of cultural competency?
The first physical therapist.
Who is Mary McMillian?
The word root meaning "clot".
What is thromb-o?
Restate, reflect and clarify during communication with a patient.
What is active listening?
The component of obtaining and reviewing patient history, performing a systems review and various tests and measures.
What is Examination?
The individual who may assist with difficult living situtations for patients upon discharge from a hospital.
Who is a social worker?
Physical characteristics, language and age.
What is the top of the iceberg? What we can see related to a persons culture.
The year the PTA role was established by the APTA House of Delegates.
What is 1967?
The word root meaning "joint"?
What is arthr-o?
The non-medical factors that influence health outcomes.
What are the Social Determinants of Health?
Participation in decisions involving the physical therapy POC to the extent reasonable and possible.
What is an example statement of a patient bill of rights?
Providing care that is respectful of and responsive to individual patient preferences, needs, and values and ensuring that patient values guide all clinical decisions
What is patient centered care?
Self-reflection, recognizing the need for cultural competence in healthcare and applying knowledge of cultural beliefs to interactions with patients.
How you can improve your cultural competence?