ADVANCED PRACTICE NURSING: ESSENTIALS FOR ROLE DEVELOPMENT 4TH
EDITION BY LUCILLE A. JOEL ALL CHAPTERS 1-30 COVERED
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS GRADED A+
NEWEST VERSION.
,Table of Content
I. The Evolution of Advanced Practice
1. Advanced Practice Nursing: Doing What Has to Be Done-Radicals, Renegades, and Rebels (Lynne M. Dunphy)
2. Emerging Roles of the Advanced Practice Nurse (Deborah Becker & Caroline Doherty)
3. Role Development: A Theoretical Perspective (Lucille A. Joel)
4. Educational Preparation of Advanced Practice Nurses: Looking to the Future (Phyllis Shanley Hansell)
5. Global Perspectives on Advanced Nursing Practice by (Madrean Schober & Anna Green)
II. The Practice Environment
6. Advanced Practice Nurses and Prescriptive Authority (Jan Towers)
7. Credentialing and Clinical Privileges for the Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (Ann Carey & Mary Smolenski)
8. The Kaleidoscope of Collaborative Practice (Alice F. Kuehn)
9. Participation of the Advanced Practice Nurse in Health Plans and Quality Initiatives (Rita Munley Gallagher)
10. Public Policy and the Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (Marie Eileen Onieal)
11. Resource Management (Eileen D. Flaherty, Antigone Grasso, & Cindy Aiena)
12. Mediated Roles: Working With and Through Other People by (Thomas D. Smith, Maria L. Vezina, Mary E. Samost, & Kelly Reilly)
III. Competency in Advanced Practice
13. Evidence-Based Practice (Deborah C. Messecar & Christine A. Tanner)
14. Advocacy and the Advanced Practice Nurse (Andrea Brassard)
,15. Case Management and Advanced Practice Nursing (Denise Fessler & Irene McEachen)
16. The Advanced Practice Nurse and Research (Beth Quatrara and Dale Shaw)
17. The Advanced Practice Nurse: Holism and Complementary and Integrative Health Approaches (Carole Ann Drick)
18. Basic Skills for Teaching and the Advanced Practice Nurse (Valerie Sabol, Benjamin A. Smallheer, & Marilyn H. Oermann)
19. Culture as a Variable in Practice (Mary Masterson Germain)
20. Conflict Resolution in Advanced Practice Nursing (David M. Price & Patricia Murphy)
21. Leadership for APNs: If Not Now, When? (Edna Cadmus)
22. Information Technology and the Advanced Practice Nurse by (Robert Scoloveno)
23. Writing for Publication (Shirley Smoyak)
IV. Ethical, Legal and Business Acumen
24. Measuring Advanced Practice Nurse Performance: Outcome Indicators, Models of Evaluation and the Issue of Value (Shirley Girouard,
Patricia DiFusco, and Joseph Jennas)
25. Advanced Practice Registered Nurses: Accomplishments, Trends, and Future Development (Jane M. Flanagan, Allyssa Harris, & Dorothy A.
Jones)
26. Starting a Practice and Practice Management (Judith Barberio)
27. The Advanced Practice Nurse as Employee or Independent Contractor: Legal and Contractual Considerations (Kathleen M. Gialanella)
28. The Law, The Courts, and the Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (David M. Keepnews)
29. Malpractice and the Advanced Practice Nurse (Carolyn T. Torres)
30. Ethics and the Advanced Practice Nurse (Gladys L. Husted, James H. Husted, & Carrie Scotto)
, CHAPTER1:
ANSWERS AND RATIONALES
1. Which change represents the primary impetus for the end of the era of the female lay
healer?
1. Perception of health promotion as an obligation
2. Development of a clinical nurse specialist position statement
3. Foundation of the American Association of Nurse-Midwives
4. Emergence of a medical establishment
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1. This is incorrect. Lay healers traditionally viewed their role as being a function
of their community obligations; however, the emerging medical
establishment viewed healing as a commodity. The emergence of a male
medical establishment represents the primary impetus for the end of the era
of the female lay healer.
2. This is incorrect. The American Nurses Association (ANA) position statement
on educational requirements for the clinical nurse specialist (CNS) was
developed in 1965; the ANA’s position statement on the role of the CNS was
issued in 1976. The emergence of a male medical establishment represents
the primary impetus for the end of the era of the female lay healer.
3. This is incorrect. The American Association of Nurse-Midwives (AANM) was
founded in 1928. The emergence of a male medical establishment represents
the primary impetus for the end of the era of the female lay healer.
4. This is correct. The emergence of a male medical establishment represents
the primary impetus for the end of the era of the female lay healer. Whereas
lay healers viewed their role as being a function of their community
obligations, the emerging medical establishment viewed healing as a
commodity. The era of the female lay healer began and ended in the 19th
century. The American Association of Nurse-Midwives (AANM) was founded
in 1928. The American Nurses Association (ANA) position statement on
educational requirements for the clinical nurse specialist (CNS) was developed
in 1965; the ANA’s position statement on the role of the CNS was issued in
1976.
2. The beginning of modern nursing is traditionally considered to have begun with which
event?
1. Establishment of the first school of nursing
2. Incorporation of midwifery by the lay healer
3. Establishment of the Frontier Nursing Service (FNS)
4. Creation of the American Association of Nurse-Midwives (AANM)