Ethics
MISC
Planning and Communication
Review
Preventions
100
The definition of the ethical principle of respect for autonomy
What is the clients select health actions that fulfill their goals
100
family and culture, social and environmental, access, health care financing.
What are the four groups of factors that influence community health?
100
Plan, organize, implement, and evaluate intervention programs that address the specific health needs of the community.
What is the desired outcome of of community health program planning?
100

These are the five rights of delegation 

What are 

Right task.

Right circumstance.

Right person.

Right supervision.

Right direction and communication

100

This type of prevention can be described as providing shelters and crisis lines for those who have experienced violence

What is tertiary prevention

200

This ethical principal is when no harm is done when applying standards of care (Example: not giving opioids that may hasten death or protecting the client's confidential information)

What is Nonmaleficence

200
When it is difficult for a nurse or client to understand the other's language.
When should an interpreter be used?
200
Set by analysis of assessment data Established by extent of the problem, the relevance, and estimated impact of the intervention.
How are priorities set and established?
200

These are 3 ways to maintain confidentiality 

Log off computer when leaving 

Never share IDS or passwords

Comply with HIPAA 

Etc. (ATI page 30)

200

An example of this type of prevention is providing screenings for individuals to identify substance use disorders

What is secondary prevention

300

This ethical principal maximizes possible benefits and minimizes possible harms (examples assessing costs, risks and benefits when planning interventions)

What is Beneficence

300

The care map can be used to support the implementation of clinical guidelines and protocols. These are based on cast and length of stay parameters

What is a clinical pathway

300

Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation

What is SBAR

300
teaching good nutrition, teaching knowledge of health hazards, providng information on immunizations and how to use protective equipment.
What are occupational health nurses roles and responsibilities in primary prevention?
300

An example of this type of prevention is educating workers in a day care about signs and symptoms of infectious rash

What is primary prevention?

400
Assessing to determine needs, interventions to protect ad promote health and prevent disease for a specific population.
What are the purposes of population-focused nursing?
400

These are 2 types of learning methods 

auditory, visual, kinesthetic, multi-modal, etc. 

400

This is when discharge planning should be implemented

Upon admission

400

This is the action you would take if you had an order that you could not read

Clarify the order with the provider

400

This type of individual prevention would refer homeowners to lead abatement resources

What is tertiary prevention ATI page 16

500
Study of health-related trends in population to prevent disease, & maintain and protect health.
What is epidemiology?
500

This is assisting the client to modify cultural practices that are not beneficial to the client's health

cultural repatterning

500

The goal of this is "to solve multiple problems related to the client with various complex needs"

What is the primary goal of inter professional team collaboration?

500

This is a communication tool for interprofessional healthcare team

What is documentation

500

An example of this type of prevention is offering immunization clinic to a special population or group of people

What is primary prevention (ATI page 8)