Hartman's Nursing Assistant Care ACTUAL EXAM LATEST
VERSION WITH COMPLETE QUESTIONS AND CORRECT DETAILED
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100% .
long-term care (LTC) care given in long-term care facilities for people who need 24-
hour, skilled care.
skilled care medically necessary care given by a skilled nurse or therapist.
length of stay the number of days a person stays in a healthcare facility.
chronic long-term or long-lasting.
diagnoses physicians' determinations of an illness.
home health care care that is provided in a person's home.
residences for people who do not need skilled, 24-hour
assisted living
care, but do require some help with daily care.
care for people who need some help during certain
adult day services
hours, but who do not live in the facility where care is
given.
24-hour skilled care for short-term illnesses or injuries;
acute care
generally given in hospitals and ambulatory surgical
centers.
care given in a hospital or in a long-term care facility for
subacute care
people who need less care than for an acute illness,
but more care than for a chronic illness.
care is given for less than 24 hours for people who
outpatient care
have had treatment or surgery and need short-term
skilled care.
care that is given by specialists to help restore or
rehabilitation
improve function after an illness or injury.
daily personal care tasks such as bathing; caring for skin,
activities of daily living
nails, hair, and teeth; dressing; toileting; eating and
drinking; walking, and transferring.
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a term given to the process of transforming services for elders so
culture change that they are
based on the values and practices of the person
receiving care; core values include choice, dignity,
respect, self-determination, and purposeful living.
a type of care that places the emphasis on the person
person-directed care
needing care and his or her individuality and
capabilities.
a federal health insurance program for people who are
Medicare
65 or older, are disabled, or are ill and cannot work.
a medical assistance program for people with low
Medicaid
incomes, as well as for people with disabilities.
charting documenting important information and observations about
residents
special equipment that helps a person who is ill or
assistive devices
disabled to perform activities of daily living; also
called adaptive devices.
chain of command the line of authority within a facility.
a legal term that means someone can be held
liability
responsible for harming someone else.
defines the tasks that healthcare providers are legally
scope of practice
allowed to do and how to do them correctly.
a plan developed for each resident to achieve certain
care plan
goals; it outlines the steps and tasks that the care
team must perform.
policy a course of action that should be taken every time a certain
situation occurs
professional having to do with work or a job
procedure a method, or way, of doing something.
personal relating to life outside one's job, such as family, friends, and home
life.
how a person behaves when he is on the job; it includes
professionalism
how a person dresses, the words he uses, and the
things he talks about.
ethics the knowledge of right and wrong.
rules set by the government to help people live
laws
peacefully together and to ensure order and safety.
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a law passed by the federal government that includes
Omnibus Budget minimum standards for nursing assistant training,
Reconciliation Act (OBRA)
staffing requirements, resident assessment instructions,
and
information on rights for residents.
cite in a long-term care facility, to find a problem through a survey.
numerous rights identified in the OBRA law that relate to
Residents' Rights how residents must be treated while living in a
facility; they provide an ethical code of conduct for
healthcare workers.
the process in which a person, with the help of a doctor,
informed consent
makes informed decisions about his or her health
care
purposeful mistreatment that causes physical, mental, or
abuse
emotional pain or injury to someone.
the failure to provide needed care that results in
neglect
physical, mental, or emotional harm to a person.
physical abuse any treatment, intentional or not, that causes harm to a person's
body.
emotional harm caused by threatening, scaring,
psychological abuse
humiliating, intimidating, isolating, or insulting a person,
or by treating him as a child; also includes verbal
abuse.
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