Development - Answers "A variety of gradual changes that occur across multiple domains and result
in an individual's functional abilities" (Giddens, 2021).
Adaptive delays - Answers Result of complex integration of multiple skills and abilities easily impacted
by injury, illness, substance use, exposure to trauma, or accumulation of toxic chronic stressors"
(Giddens, 2021).
Five Attributes to Professional Identity - Answers DOING
BEING
ACTING ETHICALLY
FLOURISHING
CHANGING IDENTITIES
Ethical Issues - Answers Most frequent ethical issues
• Protecting patients' rights and human dignity
• Respecting/not respecting informed consent to treatment
• Providing care with possible risk to nurse's health
• Using/not using physical or chemical restraints
• Working with staffing patterns that limit patient access to nursing care
Most disturbing ethical issues
• Coping w/staffing patterns that limit patient access to nursing care
• Prolonging the living/dying process with inappropriate measures
• Not considering the quality of a patient's life
• Implementing managed care policies that threaten quality of life
• Working with unethical/impaired colleagues
Health Laws - Answers Common Law - derived from decisions made by supreme courts
•HIPPATort Law (Medical negligence or malpractice) - wrongful/unreasonable action or omission that
causes harm
•Liability of nurses, physicians, etc...
Contract Law - mutual agreements between 2 or more individuals
•Healthcare contracts between insurance & consumers
Criminal Law - crime that threatens or harms others or endangers the property or safety of people
•Intentional or neglectful patient care
Consent for treatment - Answers Outlines patient self ‐determination
Right to privacy and protection
Must be voluntarily in writing
Patient must have capacity
Patient has right to refuse
Capacity - Answers •Determination made by physician or other healthcare practitioner
•Evaluation or assessment required
•Can change over time
•Drugs and medical conditions can impact
•Progress dementia, recent brain surgery
Advanced Directives - Answers Written document outlines patient's wishes
Can assign someone to make decisions
Must be signed
Other names: Durable power of attorney, living will
POLST - Answers Physician orders for life‐sustaining treatment
•Set of portable medical orders
•Complement to advance directive•Doctor & patient MUST sign
•Does NOT appoint surrogate
•Copy should be in chart, original with patient
8 Principles of Patient‐centered care - Answers 1. Respect for patient's values, preferences, and
expressed needs
2. Coordination and integration of care
3. Information and education
4. Physical comfort
, 5. Emotional support and alleviation of fear and anxiety
6. Involvement of family and friends
7. Continuity and transition
8. Access to care
Nurses' Role - Answers Respect and uphold patient beliefs
Involve patient and family in decision‐making
Provide education
Collaboration
Clinical Judgement - Answers Interpretations & inferences that influences actions in clinical practice
Clinical reasoning - thinking process where nurse reaches a clinical judgement
Critical thinking - cognitive process used for analysis of an issue/problem
Standards-Based Approaches - Answers Involves use of algorithms, decision trees, patient care
guidelines (standards of care)
Standardized approaches to patient care within an institution
Based on best practices/evidenced-based
If there is a rule/guideline that covers situation, clinical judgement is not required
Evidence-Based Practice - Answers Uses best evidence to inform practice to improve patient
outcomes
Scientific knowledge & clinical experience are important to determine if particular research is relevant
Clinical judgement helps nurses question current practices & when guidelines need to be updated
Interpretivist Perspective - Answers -Belief that life experiences are culturally-bound, people
interpret these experiences on the basis of their encounters within a given culture
◦ Based on intuition and experience
◦ Requires holistic view of patient situation
Nursing process - Answers Nursing Process
Key words: Diagnose (Analyze)
A - Assessment A - Assessment
D - Diagnose A - Analyze
P - Plan P - Plan
I - Implement I - Implement
E - Evaluate E - Evaluate
Disability & Impairment - Answers Functional disabilities-Negative aspects that affect health
condition causing social or physical limitation
Functional impairment-Physical abnormalities that underlies these limitations and caused by some
type of disease process or illness
Two dimensions - Answers Attributes: defining characteristics of functional ability
Capacity to perform specific functional activity
Antecedents: events that must happen before functional ability can exist
Development of physiologic process - neural, cognitive, endocrine, muscuoloskeletal, metabolic
Importance in healthcare - Answers Signal need for services
Monitor treatment
Facilitate cost-effectiveness
Interprofessional Collaboration
BADLs & IADLs - Answers BADLs (ADLs): basic activities of daily living
Personal care, mobility, eating, hygiene, grooming, bathing, oral care, dressing, toileting
IADLs: instrumental activities of daily living; complex skills to live in community
Managing money, grocery shopping, cooking, house cleaning, doing laundry, taking meds, using
phone, accessing transportation
Primary vs. Secondary - Answers Primary: Ability to perform particular function never developed
Cerebral Palsy