Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - Answers provides people with limited English proficiency
access to health care; these individuals cannot be denied health care services.
Limited English proficiency is associated with - Answers a lower quality of care
English proficiency is associated with - Answers a higher quality of care.
Patients with language barriers have an increased risk of - Answers nonadherence to
medication regimens
What is the yin/yang theory of health? - Answers Health exists when all aspects of the person
are in perfect balance.
hot/cold theory - Answers health consists of a positive state of total well-being, including
physical, psychological, spiritual, and social aspects of the person
biomedical model of Western tradition views health as - Answers the absence of disease.
biomedical or scientific theory - Answers high-level wellness (or health) exists with optimal
functioning of the human body.
Which theory has been expanded in an attempt to study the degree to which a person's lifestyle
reflects his or her traditional heritage? - Answers Heritage consistency
Behavior theory or behaviorism - Answers learning theory
Carl Rogers described the concepts of congruence and incongruence as - Answers important
ideas in his theory of personality and human development.
Socialization - Answers the process of being raised within a culture and acquiring the
characteristics of that group.
Which of the following symptoms is greatly influenced by a person's cultural heritage? -
Answers Pain
Hearing loss is more common in - Answers whites than blacks
lactose intolerance is common in - Answers African Americans, American Indians, and Asian
Americans.
When considering cultural competence, the nurse must develop knowledge of discrete areas to
understand the health care needs of others. These discrete areas include understanding of:
(Select all that apply.) - Answers -his or her own heritage.
- the heritage of the nursing profession.
, - the heritage of the patient.
-the heritage of the health care system
When preparing the physical setting for an interview, the interviewer should: - Answers conduct
the interview at eye level and at a distance of 4 to 5 ft.
Parents or caretakers accompany children to the health care setting. Starting at ___ years of age,
the interviewer asks the child directly about his or her presenting symptoms. - Answers 7
Which of the following statements made by the interviewer would be an appropriate response? -
Answers "tell me what yu mean by 'bad blood.'"
False reassurance example - Answers "I know just hw you feel"
While discussing the treatment plan, the nurse infers that the patient is uncomfortable asking
the physician for a different treatment because of fear of the physician's reaction. In this
situation, the nurse's verbal interpretation: - Answers Helps the pt understand personal feelings
in relation to his or her verbal message
The use of euphemisms to avoid reality or to hide feelings is known as: - Answers avoidance
language
empathy - Answers viewing the world from the other person's inner frame of reference...
empathy is - Answers therapeutic
sympathy is - Answers non therapeutic
ethnocentrism is - Answers the belief that one's ethnic or cultural group is more important or
superior
When addressing a toddler during the interview, the health care provider should: - Answers use
short, simple, concrete sentences
detailed explanations would be appropriate for which age? - Answers school-aged child,
adolescent, adult
Nonverbal communication is the primary form of communication for which group of individuals?
- Answers infants
preschoolers' communication is - Answers direct, concrete, literal, and set in the present
adolescents should be - Answers treated wit respect; the nurse should use open, honest
professional communication.
older adults may need - Answers special considerations related to physical limitations