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TEST BANK FOR ADVANCED PRACTICE NURSING IN THE CARE OF OLDER ADULTS 2ND EDITION BY KENNEDY-MALONE CHAPTER 1-19-COMPLETE GUIDE 2025

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TEST BANK FOR ADVANCED PRACTICE NURSING IN THE CARE OF OLDER ADULTS 2ND EDITION BY KENNEDY-MALONE CHAPTER 1-19-COMPLETE GUIDE 2025

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TEST BANK FOR ADVANCED PRACTICE
NURSING IN THE CARE OF OLDER
ADULTS 2ND EDITION BY
KENNEDY-MALONE CHAPTER
1-19|COMPLETE GUIDE 2022




Gerontology Foundations & Aging Theories (1–20)

1. The primary focus of gerontology as a discipline is to:​
A. Treat chronic disease in older adults​
B. Study aging and its impact on individuals and society​
C. Develop medications for age-related illnesses​
D. Eliminate functional decline in older adults​
Answer: B​
Rationale: Gerontology is the scientific study of aging and its biological, psychological, and
social aspects.

2. Which theory of aging proposes that cells have a finite number of divisions?​
A. Free radical theory​
B. Wear-and-tear theory​
C. Programmed senescence theory​
D. Disengagement theory​
Answer: C​
Rationale: Programmed senescence suggests cells are genetically programmed to stop
dividing after a certain point.

3. An older adult gradually reduces social involvement but reports being content. Which theory
best explains this?​
A. Activity theory​
B. Disengagement theory​

, C. Continuity theory​
D. Socioemotional selectivity theory​
Answer: B​
Rationale: Disengagement theory states older adults naturally withdraw from roles and
relationships.

4. Activity theory suggests successful aging is associated with:​
A. Accepting social withdrawal​
B. Maintaining roles and social engagement​
C. Avoiding physical activity​
D. Relying on family for all care​
Answer: B​
Rationale: Activity theory emphasizes ongoing social and productive engagement.

5. The continuity theory of aging emphasizes:​
A. Sudden lifestyle changes in late life​
B. Progressive social isolation​
C. Consistency of internal and external structures over time​
D. Biological decline as the key factor​
Answer: C​
Rationale: Continuity theory states people retain habits, preferences, and roles across the life
span.

6. Ageism is best defined as:​
A. The study of aging​
B. Negative stereotypes and discrimination based on age​
C. Legal protections for older adults​
D. Depression associated with aging​
Answer: B​
Rationale: Ageism involves prejudice and discrimination directed at individuals because of their
age.

7. A nurse practitioner advocates for flexible clinic hours to improve access for older adults. This
is an example of:​
A. Ageism​
B. Primary prevention​
C. Systems-level advocacy​
D. Paternalism​
Answer: C​
Rationale: Changing organizational structures to support older adults is systems-level
advocacy.

8. Which is the most accurate statement about normal aging?​
A. All older adults will develop dementia​
B. Mild memory retrieval slowing can be normal​

, C. Blood pressure must increase with age​
D. Depression is inevitable​
Answer: B​
Rationale: Mild slowing of recall can occur with normal aging; dementia and depression are not
inevitable.

9. A hallmark of successful aging from a gerontological perspective is:​
A. Absence of all chronic disease​
B. High income and education​
C. Adaptation and resilience despite health changes​
D. Dependence on caregivers​
Answer: C​
Rationale: Successful aging emphasizes adaptation, coping, and quality of life.

10. Which best represents primary aging (senescence)?​
A. Osteoarthritis from years of heavy labor​
B. Lung cancer from smoking​
C. Presbyopia with advancing age​
D. Stroke from uncontrolled hypertension​
Answer: C​
Rationale: Primary aging refers to intrinsic, universal age-related changes such as presbyopia.

11. The “oldest-old” category typically includes adults aged:​
A. 60–69​
B. 70–79​
C. 80–89​
D. 85 and older​
Answer: D​
Rationale: “Oldest-old” commonly refers to individuals 85+.

12. A key goal of advanced practice gerontologic nursing is to:​
A. Focus only on disease treatment​
B. Promote function, independence, and quality of life​
C. Reduce health care costs above all else​
D. Replace physician-led care​
Answer: B​
Rationale: Advanced practice nurses aim to maintain function and quality of life, not just treat
disease.

13. An example of secondary aging is:​
A. Decreased renal blood flow with age​
B. Wrinkling of the skin​
C. Hypertension from a sedentary lifestyle​
D. Graying hair​

, Answer: C​
Rationale: Secondary aging arises from disease and lifestyle, such as hypertension.

14. Socioemotional selectivity theory posits that as people age they:​
A. Expand social networks​
B. Prefer emotionally meaningful relationships​
C. Avoid close relationships​
D. Aim to maximize financial gain​
Answer: B​
Rationale: The theory suggests older adults prioritize emotionally satisfying relationships.

15. The free radical theory of aging focuses on damage caused by:​
A. Programmed cell death​
B. Protein cross-linking​
C. Unstable oxygen molecules​
D. Immune system failure​
Answer: C​
Rationale: Free radicals are unstable oxygen species that damage cells.

16. A nurse practitioner encouraging resistance training in older adults is primarily targeting:​
A. Immune function​
B. Sarcopenia​
C. Cognitive decline​
D. Skin integrity​
Answer: B​
Rationale: Resistance training helps prevent or slow loss of muscle mass (sarcopenia).

17. The concept of “compression of morbidity” means:​
A. Living longer with more disability​
B. Delaying the onset of disability so most of life is spent in good health​
C. Accepting disability as unavoidable​
D. Reducing access to health care​
Answer: B​
Rationale: Compression of morbidity seeks to shorten the period of disability before death.

18. One major barrier to high-quality geriatric care is:​
A. Oversupply of geriatric clinicians​
B. Limited evidence-based guidelines​
C. Lack of interest in chronic disease​
D. Under-recognition of geriatric syndromes​
Answer: D​
Rationale: Geriatric syndromes like frailty and delirium are often under-recognized.

19. The most influential factor in an older adult’s ability to live independently is often:​
A. Education level​
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