front 1 Principles of public health nursing practice focus on | back 1 assisting individuals and communities with achieving a healthy living environment |
front 2 Essential public health functions include | back 2 community assessment, policy development, and access to resources |
front 3 When population-based health care services are effective, | back 3 there is a greater likelihood that the higher levels of services will contribute efficiently to health improvement of the population. |
front 4 The community health nurse | back 4 cares for the community as a whole and assesses the individual or family within the context of the community. |
front 5 Successful community health nursing practice | back 5 involves building relationships with the community and being responsive to changes within the community. |
front 6 The community-based nurse’s competence is | back 6 based on decision making at the level of the individual patient. |
front 7 The special needs of vulnerable populations are | back 7 a challenge that nurses face in caring for these patients’ increasingly complex acute and chronic health conditions. |
front 8 A community-based nurse is | back 8 competent as a caregiver, collaborator, educator, counselor, change agent, patient advocate, case manager, and epidemiologist. |
front 9 Patients are more likely to accept a change if | back 9 it is more advantageous, compatible, realistic, and easy to adopt. |
front 10 Evaluation is a step of the nursing process that includes two components: | back 10 an examination of a condition or situation and a judgment as to whether change has occurred. |
front 11 During evaluation apply critical thinking to | back 11 make clinical decisions and redirect nursing care to best meet patient needs. |
front 12 Positive evaluations occur | back 12 when you meet desired outcomes and they lead you to conclude that your interventions were effective. |
front 13 Criterion-based standards for evaluation are | back 13 the physiological, emotional, and behavioral responses that are a patient’s goals and expected outcomes. |
front 14 Evaluative measures are | back 14 assessment skills or techniques that you use to collect data for determining if outcomes were met. |
front 15 It sometimes becomes necessary to collect evaluative measures over time to | back 15 determine if a pattern of change exists |
front 16 When interpreting findings, you | back 16 compare the patient’s behavioral responses and physiological signs and symptoms that you expect to see with those actually seen from your evaluation and judge the degree of agreement. |
front 17 Documentation of evaluative findings | back 17 allows all members of the health care team to know whether or not a patient is progressing. |
front 18 A patient’s nursing diagnoses, priorities, and interventions sometimes | back 18 change as a result of evaluation. |
front 19 Evaluation examines two factors: | back 19 the appropriateness of the interventions selected and the correct application of the intervention. |
front 20 Communication is | back 20 a powerful therapeutic tool and an essential nursing skill that influences others and achieves positive health outcomes. |
front 21 Effective interdisciplinary communication is essential to | back 21 provide safe transitions and care. |
front 22 Effective communication is critical in | back 22 promoting collaboration and teamwork providing patient-centered care. |
front 23 Critical thinking facilitates communication through | back 23 creative inquiry, focused self-awareness and awareness of others, purposeful analysis, and control of perceptual biases. |
front 24 Communication is most effective when the receiver and sender | back 24 accurately perceive the meaning of one another’s messages. |
front 25 The sender’s and receiver’s physical and developmental status, perceptions, values, emotions, knowledge, sociocultural background, roles, and environment all influence | back 25 message transmission. |
front 26 Effective verbal communication requires | back 26 appropriate intonation, clear and concise phrasing, proper pacing of statements, and proper timing and relevance of a message. |
front 27 Effective nonverbal communication complements and strengthens | back 27 the message conveyed by verbal communication. |
front 28 Nurses use intrapersonal, interpersonal, transpersonal, small-group, and public interaction | back 28 to achieve positive change and health goals. |
front 29 Nurses strengthen helping relationships by | back 29 establishing trust, empathy, autonomy, confidentiality, and professional competence. |
front 30 Effective communication techniques are facilitative and tend to encourage | back 30 the other person openly expressing ideas, feelings, or concerns. |
front 31 Ineffective communication techniques are | back 31 inhibiting and tend to block the other person’s willingness to openly express ideas, feelings, or concerns. |
front 32 Blend social and informational interactions to help your patients explore feelings and manage health issues. | back 32 with therapeutic communication techniques |
front 33 Older adults with sensory, motor, or cognitive impairments require the adaptation of | back 33 communication techniques to compensate for their loss of function and special needs. |
front 34 Patients with impaired verbal communication require | back 34 special consideration and alterations in communication techniques to facilitate sending, receiving, and interpreting messages. |
front 35 Desired outcomes for patients with impaired verbal communication include | back 35 increased satisfaction with interpersonal interactions, the ability to send and receive clear messages, and attention to and accurate interpretation of verbal and nonverbal cues. |
front 36 The nurse ensures that patients, families, and communities receive information needed to | back 36 promote, restore, and maintain optimal health. |
front 37 Teaching is most effective when it is | back 37 responsive to a learner’s needs. |
front 38 Teaching is a form of interpersonal communication, with the teacher and learner | back 38 actively involved in a process that increases the learner’s knowledge and skills. |
front 39 The ability to learn depends on a person’s | back 39 physical and cognitive attributes. |
front 40 The ability to attend to the learning process depends on physical | back 40 comfort and anxiety levels and the presence of environmental distraction. |
front 41 A person’s health beliefs influence the willingness to | back 41 gain knowledge and skills necessary to maintain health. |
front 42 Use of a theory (e.g., social learning theory) or theoretical concepts (e.g., self-efficacy) | back 42 enhances learning. |
front 43 Time teaching so it occurs when | back 43 a patient is ready to learn. |
front 44 Patients of different age-groups require | back 44 different teaching strategies because of developmental capabilities. |
front 45 Involve patients actively in | back 45 all aspects of teaching plans. |
front 46 Nurses use learning objectives to | back 46 set learning priorities. |
front 47 A combination of teaching methods improves the learner’s | back 47 attentiveness and involvement. |
front 48 A teacher is more effective when presenting information that | back 48 builds on a learner’s existing knowledge. |
front 49 Effective teachers use | back 49 positive reinforcement. |
front 50 Older adults learn most effectively when | back 50 information is paced slowly and presented in small amounts. |
front 51 Evaluate a patient’s learning by | back 51 observing performance of expected learning behaviors under desired conditions. |
front 52 Effective documentation describes the entire process of | back 52 patient education, promotes continuity of care, and demonstrates that educational standards have been met. |