Profession Right Ans - An individual with specialized skills and abilities
working in his or her area of experience.
Professionalism Right Ans - The qualities or traits that mark a person
working in a particular profession.
Certification Right Ans - A credential indicating specific training in a career
speciality certification of choice for activity professionals is though (NCCAP)
which is recognized in many states and federal regulations.
Professional organizations Right Ans - Nonprofit organization that works
to improve the image, working conditions, and skill levels of people in
particular occupations.
Advocacy Right Ans - To act, speak, or write in support of an issue.
Protesting Right Ans - To object, complain or disagree with something.
Activism Right Ans - The practice of pursuing political or other goals
through vigorous action, often is including protests and demonstrations.
Regulatory requirements Right Ans - A rule or directive made and
maintained by an authority. State regulations are in place for nursing homes,
medical day care centers and assisted living. Federal regulations are in place
for nursing homes only.
Interpretive guidelines Right Ans - Publication to help nursing facilities
follow the law and aid surveyors to enforce the law.
Survey process Right Ans - Methodology that the state/federal surveyors
practice when inspecting care facilities.
Deficiency Right Ans - In LTC this is something the state surveyors find
during a survey, it means the facility has not met the state or federal
standards of care.
, Plan of correction Right Ans - This is written by a care facility if a deficiency
is issued. It describes how the care facility will fix the deficiency.
CMS Right Ans - Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Federal
agency overseeing skilled nursing facilities.
Life course perspective Right Ans - How one experience a timetable of life
events, how society looks upon individual life choices.
Life span Right Ans - The greatest number of years a person can live.
Theories of Aging Right Ans - Various theories as to why we age - two
categories - genetic and wear and tear theories
Abraham Maslow Right Ans - A psychologist who proposed the hierarchy
of needs, with self-actualization as the ultimate psychological need. Humans
have a hierarchy of needs ranging from lower-level needs for survival and
safety to higher-level needs for intellectual and finally self-actualization.
Erik Erickson Right Ans - A psychologist who developed the theory
involving eight stages of life. How one responded to life experiences in those
stages would mold personality.
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross and stages of grief Right Ans - A psychologist who
studied death and dying. Her theory proposes that terminally ill pass though a
sequence of 5 stages.
1. Denial
2. Anger/Resentment
3. Bargaining
4. Depression
5. Acceptance
cohort effect Right Ans - The consequences of having been born in a given
year and having grown up during a particular time period with its own unique
pressures, problems, challenges, and opportunities.
cumulative disadvantage Right Ans - the idea that the negative effects of
patterns of inequality in wealth, status, and availability of opportunities
accumulate over the life span.