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DNP 605 ADVANCED HEALTH ASSESSMENT FINAL EXAM 2024 ASU VERIFIED STUDY GUIDE QUESTIONS GRADED A+ (200 QUESTIONS)

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DNP 605 ADVANCED HEALTH ASSESSMENT FINAL EXAM 2024 ASU VERIFIED STUDY GUIDE QUESTIONS GRADED A+ (200 QUESTIONS)

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DNP 605 ADVANCED HEALTH ASSESSMENT FINAL
EXAM 2024 ASU VERIFIED STUDY GUIDE QUESTIONS
GRADED A+ (200 QUESTIONS)
Managed Care - ANSWER: 1) acts as the insurance company and the providers of
care.
2) Employs mechanisms to control (manage) utilization of medical services.
3) Determines the price at which the services are purchased and how much the
providers get paid.
4) Is the most dominant health care delivery system in the United States and
available to most Americans. This is includes both Health Maintenance Organizations
(HMO) and Preferred Provider Organizations (PPO).
5) Employers and government are the primary financiers of managed care.
6) An MCO functions like an insurance company.
- It promises to provide health care services contracted under the health plan to the
enrollees of the plan.

Enrollee - ANSWER: a member; an individual covered under the plan

gatekeepers - ANSWER: a healthcare professional (primary care, general
practitioner) who regulates access especially to hospitals and specialists
- managed care plans rely on gatekeepers to orchestrate and control the health care
of enrollees

Health plan - ANSWER: -a contractual arrangement between the MCO and the
enrollee
-includes a list of covered health services to which enrollees are entitled
-uses selected providers, usually primary care, general practitioners (the
"gatekeepers")

Tricare - ANSWER: Financed by the military, and covers families, dependents or
retired military

VA health care system - ANSWER: -Is available to retired veterans
-Focuses on hospital, mental health and long-term care
-Is one of the largest and oldest (1946) organized health systems in the world
*provide medial care, education and training, research, contingency support and
emergency management for the Department of Defense medical care system.

"safety net" providers - ANSWER: provide care and services to the poor, uninsured,
minorities and immigrants living in disadvantaged communities

cost shifting - ANSWER: -Medicaid, the primary financial source for the safety net,
does not allow much cost shifting

,-charges an insured patient more than it does an uninsured patient for the same
procedure. Those with health insurance pay for financial loss hospitals incur when
providing services to those without insurance

Market justice - ANSWER: -"assume free market", market based demands, peoples
ability to pay, economic reward
-individual responsibility(pull up by boot straps)
-"freedom of individuals to be left alone"
-private solutions to social problems

Social Justice - ANSWER: -social resource, active government involvement, ability to
pay inconsequential, equal access is viewed as basic right
-everyone entitled to basic package of benefits
-public solutions to social problems
-public health practitioners should work towards these social goals

National Health Insurance - ANSWER: -Canada
-insures national population against the cost of health care
-private providers, coordinated by government

National Health Systems - ANSWER: -Great Britain
-financed by tax supported national health insurance programs
-government owns/runs everything

Socialized Health Insurance Systems - ANSWER: -Germany
-healthcare is financed through government mandated contributions by employers,
employees, and general taxed.
-private providers, government controll

Systems Framework - ANSWER: -Organized approach to understanding the
components of the US health care delivery system.
- components designed to achieve common goals, organize approach

What Is Health? - ANSWER: -It presupposes(precondition) the existence of illness or
disease.
-It emphasizes clinical diagnosis and medical interventions to:
-Treat disease or its symptoms.
-Have a clinical diagnosis and medical interventions.

Health - ANSWER: Health is not merely the absence of disease (or injury), but
complete physical, mental, and social wellbeing.

bio-psycho-social model of health

health care system - ANSWER: all the activities whose primary purpose is to
promote, restore, or maintain health.

,Holistic Health - ANSWER: -Treats the whole person.
-Incorporates alternative therapies.
-Has physical, mental, social, and spiritual aspects.

Holistic concepts of health care, along with preventive and health promotional
efforts, need to be adopted to significantly improve the health of Americans.

Illness - ANSWER: -Identified by a person's perception and evaluation of how he/she
is feeling. The hypochondriac is born.
-People are ill when they infer a diminished capacity to perform tasks and roles
expected by society.

Disease - ANSWER: -Based on a professional evaluation.
-Requires therapeutic intervention.

Overall satisfaction - ANSWER: -Overall satisfaction with life during and following a
person's encounter with the health care delivery system.
-An indicator of how satisfied a person was with the experiences while receiving
health care.

Goal: To have a positive effect on an individual's ability to function, meet obligations,
feel self-worth.

Interventions - ANSWER: 1) Social or medical care policy. - welfare of nation
2) Community-based interventions. -inequalities in a community
3) Health care interventions. - improve quality of services and reduce disparities
across groups
4) Individual interventions. - minimize negative social determinants in health status

four distinct time periods: - ANSWER: -Preindustrial era
-Postindustrial era
-Corporate era
-Era of health care reform (still in its infancy)

Preindustrial Medical Institutions - ANSWER: -Almshouses (poorhouses) were run by
the local government.
-Hospitals were few, and had deplorable sanitary conditions and poor ventilation.
-State governments operated asylums for patients with untreatable, chronic mental
illness.
-Pesthouses were operated to isolate people.
-Dispensaries were staffed by medical students or apprentices.

institutionalization - ANSWER: -growth of hospitals

-Advancements in medical science created the need to centralize expensive facilities
and equipment in an institution.

, "voluntary health insurance" - ANSWER: -private health insurance

Workers' Compensation - ANSWER: -originally designed to make cash payments to
workers for wages lost because of job-related injuries and disease.
-Later became compensation for medical expenses, and death benefits for survivors
were added.
-Was a trial balloon for the idea of government-sponsored health insurance.

hospital insurance plan for teachers - ANSWER: -In 1929, Justin Kimball began a
hospital insurance plan for teachers at Baylor University Hospital in Dallas, Texas. It
became the model for Blue Cross plans around the country.
-The AHA supported group hospital plans and coordinated them into a Blue Cross
network.

nontaxable employer provided health coverage - ANSWER: -In 1954, Congress made
employer-provided health coverage nontaxable.
-This was equivalent to getting more salary without having to pay taxes.

three-part program was adopted to serve two distinct populations: Medicare Parts A
and B, and Medicaid - ANSWER: -Medicare Part A was designed to use Social Security
funds to finance hospital care. (Medicare payroll tax)

-Medicare Part B was designed to cover physicians' services Through government-
subsidized insurance.
-The elderly would pay part of the premiums.

-Medicaid benefits vary from state to state.
-It is means-tested, and confines eligibility to those below an income level.

-Medicare has uniform national standards for eligibility and benefits.
-It covers anyone over the age of 65.
-In 1972, the program was expanded to include the disabled on Social Security and
those with ESRD, regardless of age.

Three main features of Corporate Era - ANSWER: 1)Corporatization-Medical care has
become the domain of large corporations
2)Information revolution-Telemedicine, e-health
3)Globalization-Various cross-border activities

Era of Health Care Reform - ANSWER: Major changes undertaken by the government
to expand health insurance to the uninsured and regulate the financing and delivery
of health care

*The era of health care reform was inaugurated by the Affordable Care Act of 2010.
However, the law fails to provide affordable coverage to millions, even though the
number of uninsured has declined.
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