TEST BANK Kelly Vana's Nursing Leadership and
Management
4th Edition by Vana & Tazbir
Chapter 1 to 31
TEST BANK
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Table of Contents:
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Unit I: NURSING LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT.
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Chapter 1. Nursing Leadership and Management.
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Chapter 2. The Healthcare Environment.
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Chapter 3. Organizational Behavior and Magnet Hospitals.
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Chapter 4. Basic Clinical Healthcare Economics.
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Chapter 5. Evidence-Based Health Care.
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Chapter 6. Nursing and Healthcare Informatics.
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Chapter 7. Population Based Healthcare Practice.
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Unit II: LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT OF THE INTERDISCIPLINARY TEAM.
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Chapter 8. Personal and Interdisciplinary Communication.
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Chapter 9. Politics and Consumer Partnerships.
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Chapter 10. Strategic Planning and organizing Patient Care.
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Chapter 11. Effective Team Building.
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Chapter 12. Power. NI NI
Chapter 13. Change, Innovation, and Conflict Management.
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Unit III: LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT OF PATIENT- CENTERED CARE.
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Chapter 14. Budget Concepts for Patient Care.
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Chapter 15. Effective Staffing.
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Chapter 16. Delegation of Patient Care.
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Chapter 17. Organization of Patient Care Management.
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Chapter 18. Time Management and Setting Patient Care Priorities.
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Chapter 19. Patient and Health Care Education.
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Unit IV: QUALITY IMPROVEMENT OF PATIENT OUTCOMES.
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Chapter 20. Managing Outcomes Using an Organizational Quality Improvement Model.
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Chapter 21. Evidence Based Strategies to Improve Patient Care Outcomes.
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Chapter 22. Decision Making and Critical Thinking.
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Chapter 23. Legal Aspects of Health Care.
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Chapter 24. Ethical Aspects of Health Care.
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Chapter 25. Culture, Generational Differences, and Spirituality.
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Unit V: LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT OF SELF AND THE FUTURE.
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Chapter 26. Collective Bargaining.
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Chapter 27. Career Planning.
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Chapter 28. Nursing Job Opportunities.
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Chapter 29. Your First Job.
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Chapter 30. Healthy Living: Balancing Personal and Professional Needs.
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Chapter 31. NCLEX Preparation and Professionalism
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Chapter 1: Nursing Leadership and ManagementNI NI NI NI NI
MULTIPLE CHOICE NI
1. According to Henri Fayol, the functions of planning, organizing, coordinating, and controlling
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are considered which aspect of management?
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a. N I Roles
b. N I Process
c. N I Functions
d. N I Taxonomy
ANS: B, The management process includes planning, organizing, coordinating, and controlling. Management roles include
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information processing, interpersonal relationships, and decision making. Management functions include planning, organizing,
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staffing, directing, coordinating, reporting, and budgeting. A taxonomy is a system that orders principles into a grouping or
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classification.
2. Which of the following is considered a decisional managerial role?
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a. N I Disseminator
b. N I Figurehead
c. N I Leader
d. N I Entrepreneur
ANS: D, The decisional managerial roles include entrepreneur, disturbance handler, allocator of resources, and negotiator. The
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information processing managerial roles include monitor, disseminator, and spokesperson. The interpersonal managerial roles
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include figurehead, leader, and liaison.
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3. A nurse manager meets regularly with other nurse managers, participates on the organizations
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committees, and attends meetings sponsored by professional organizations in order to manage
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relationships. These activities are considered which function of a manager? NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI NI
a. N I Informing
b. N I Problem solving NI
c. N I Monitoring
d. N I Networking
ANS: D, The role functions to manage relationships are networking, supporting, developing and mentoring, managing conflict
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and team building, motivating and inspiring, recognizing, and rewarding. The role functions to manage the work are planning and
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organizing, problem solving, clarifying roles and objectives, informing, monitoring, consulting, and delegating.
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4. A nurse was recently promoted to a middle-level manager position. The nurses title would most
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likely be which of the following?
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a. N I First-line manager NI
b. N I Director
c. N I Vice president of patient care services
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d. N I Chief nurse executive NI NI
ANS: B, A middle-level manager is called a director. A low managerial- level job is called the first-line manager. A nurse in an
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executive level role is called a chief nurse executive or vice president of patient care services.
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5. A nurse manager who uses Frederick Taylors scientific management approach, would most likely
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focus on which of the following?
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a. N I General principles NI
b. N I Positional authority NI
c. N I Labor productivity NI
d. N I Impersonal relations NI
ANS: C, The area of focus for scientific management is labor productivity. In bureaucratic theory, efficiency is achieved through
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impersonal relations within a formal structure and is based on positional authority. Administrative principle theory consists of
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principles of management that are relevant to any organization.
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6. According to Vrooms Theory of Motivation, force:
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a. N I is the perceived possibility that the goal will be achieved.
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b. N I describes the amount of effort one will exert to reach ones goal.
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c. N I describes people who have free will but choose to comply with orders they are given.
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d. N I is a naturally forming social group that can become a contributor to an organization.
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ANS: B, According to Vrooms Theory of Motivation, Force describes the amount of effort one will exert to reach ones goal.
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Valence speaks to the level of attractiveness or unattractiveness of the goal. Expectancy is the perceived possibility that the goal
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will be achieved. Vrooms Theory of Motivation can be demonstrated in the form of an equation: Force = Valence Expectancy
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(Vroom, 1964). The theory proposes that this equation can help to predict the motivation, or force, of an individual as described
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by Vroom.
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7. According to R. N. Lussier, motivation:
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a. N I is unconsciously demonstrated by people.
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b. N I occurs externally to influence behavior. NI NI NI NI
c. N I is determined by others choices.
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d. N I occurs internally to influence behavior. NI NI NI NI
ANS: D, Motivation is a process that occurs internally to influence and direct our behavior in order to satisfy needs. Motivation is
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not explicitly demonstrated by people, but rather it is interpreted from their behavior. Motivation is whatever influences our
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choices and creates direction, intensity, and persistence in our behavior.
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8. According to R. N. Lussier, there are content motivation theories and process motivation theories.
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Which of the following is considered a process motivation theory?
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a. N I Equity theory NI
b. N I Hierarchy of needs theory NI NI NI
c. N I Existence-relatedness-growth theory NI
d. N I Hygiene maintenance and motivation factors NI NI NI NI
ANS: A, The process motivation theories are equity theory and expectancy theory. The content motivation theories include
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Maslows hierarchy of needs theory, Aldefers existence- relatedness-growth (ERG) theory, and Herzbergs hygiene maintenance
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factors and motivation factors.
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9. The theory that includes maintenance and motivation factors is:
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a. N I Maslows hierarchy of needs. NI NI NI
b. N I Herzbergs two-factor theory. NI NI
c. N I McGregors theory X and theory Y. NI NI NI NI NI
d. N I Ouchis theory Z. NI NI