NURS 2030 Final Exam with Correct Answers
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doctor's services
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Terms in this set (114)
British nurse who created sanitation guidelines and standards of
Florence Nightingale care during the Crimean War; lady with the lamp; established
nurse education programs at British hospitals
America nurse who was appointed the superintendent of army
Dorothea Dix
nurses during the Civil War
education, theories, research, social relevance, and a value
nursing as a discipline orientation; "an open- minded, caring, intentional, thoughtful, and
responsible, unconditional acceptance and awareness of human
beings as they are"
, American Nurses Association's What the nurse does, what the nurse's responsibilities are, where
Nursing: Scope and Standards of and when client care is to be performed, why and how client
Practice care is achieved
both a science and an art Florence Nightingale defined nursing as _.
laws of disease medicine
"the nurse's primary concern has been and is for the person who,
National League for Nursing
ill, rather than for the illness itself"
care provider, case manager, researcher, educator, leader,
roles of the nurse
manager, and change agent
"a perspective on human beings reflecting the fullness and
human wholeness theory
complexity of the human condition"
4 concepts: person, environment, health, nursing; main focus:
Roy's adaptation model
people are continuous with their environment
meant for those patients who would never be absent of disease or
Newman's health as expanding
disability; main focus: health is an evolving pattern centered on
consciousness
becoming a better human, even when living with disease
main focus: health and healing are not defined by a diagnosis or lack
Nightingale's Modern Nursing
Theory of one, but is more subjective and is influenced by values and by
choices made by a patient
pure water, pure air, efficient things we can control
drainage, cleanliness, and light
caring is more than just being kind or compassionate, "the moral
Jean Watson's Theory of Caring
imperative to protect and nurture human dignity and rights", and
humanization of patients
1. Assessment (using nursing knowledge to collect,
organize, validate, and document)
2. Diagnosis/Analysis (analyze assessment data gathered
to identify health problems/risks and the needs for
the nursing process
intervention
3. Planning (ability to make decisions and problem solve,
develop goals and outcomes, and set client goals)
4. Implementation (apply nursing knowledge to implement interventions)
5. Evaluation (evaluate a client's response to nursing intervention)
1. recognize cues
2. analyze cues
3. prioritize hypotheses
Clinical Judgement Model
4. generate solutions
5. take actions
6.evaluate outcomes
the act of nurturing another person to whom one feels a
caring
commitment or responsibility; holistic in nature
Swanson's Theory of Caring maintaining belief, knowing, being with, doing for, and enabling
sympathy emotional reaction of pity toward the misfortune of another
Save
Practice questions for this set
Learn Study with Learn
doctor's services
Choose an answer
2
3 4
Don't know?
Terms in this set (114)
British nurse who created sanitation guidelines and standards of
Florence Nightingale care during the Crimean War; lady with the lamp; established
nurse education programs at British hospitals
America nurse who was appointed the superintendent of army
Dorothea Dix
nurses during the Civil War
education, theories, research, social relevance, and a value
nursing as a discipline orientation; "an open- minded, caring, intentional, thoughtful, and
responsible, unconditional acceptance and awareness of human
beings as they are"
, American Nurses Association's What the nurse does, what the nurse's responsibilities are, where
Nursing: Scope and Standards of and when client care is to be performed, why and how client
Practice care is achieved
both a science and an art Florence Nightingale defined nursing as _.
laws of disease medicine
"the nurse's primary concern has been and is for the person who,
National League for Nursing
ill, rather than for the illness itself"
care provider, case manager, researcher, educator, leader,
roles of the nurse
manager, and change agent
"a perspective on human beings reflecting the fullness and
human wholeness theory
complexity of the human condition"
4 concepts: person, environment, health, nursing; main focus:
Roy's adaptation model
people are continuous with their environment
meant for those patients who would never be absent of disease or
Newman's health as expanding
disability; main focus: health is an evolving pattern centered on
consciousness
becoming a better human, even when living with disease
main focus: health and healing are not defined by a diagnosis or lack
Nightingale's Modern Nursing
Theory of one, but is more subjective and is influenced by values and by
choices made by a patient
pure water, pure air, efficient things we can control
drainage, cleanliness, and light
caring is more than just being kind or compassionate, "the moral
Jean Watson's Theory of Caring
imperative to protect and nurture human dignity and rights", and
humanization of patients
1. Assessment (using nursing knowledge to collect,
organize, validate, and document)
2. Diagnosis/Analysis (analyze assessment data gathered
to identify health problems/risks and the needs for
the nursing process
intervention
3. Planning (ability to make decisions and problem solve,
develop goals and outcomes, and set client goals)
4. Implementation (apply nursing knowledge to implement interventions)
5. Evaluation (evaluate a client's response to nursing intervention)
1. recognize cues
2. analyze cues
3. prioritize hypotheses
Clinical Judgement Model
4. generate solutions
5. take actions
6.evaluate outcomes
the act of nurturing another person to whom one feels a
caring
commitment or responsibility; holistic in nature
Swanson's Theory of Caring maintaining belief, knowing, being with, doing for, and enabling
sympathy emotional reaction of pity toward the misfortune of another