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Examen

NUR 101 Final Exam Review: Key Concepts in Nursing and Healthcare

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Comprehensive review guide for NUR 101 Final Exam covering foundational nursing concepts, patient-centered care, communication, safety, infection control, vital signs, ethics, documentation, health assessment, medication basics, cultural competence, and healthcare systems. Designed to help nursing students strengthen core knowledge, improve clinical reasoning, and prepare for nursing school examinations and practice.

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NUR 101 Final Exam Review: Key Concepts
in Nursing and Healthcare




CHAPTER 1
● Animism: attempted to explain the cause of mysterious body changes in bodily function.
Believed that everything in nature was alive with invisible forces and endowed with
power.
○ Good spirits brought health; evil spirits brought sickness and death.
● Healthcare provider was the men's medicine man who treated disease and the nurse was
the mother who cared for her family.
● As ancient Greek civilization grew, temples became centers of medicine care.
○ Believed that illness was caused by sin and the gods’ displeasures.
● Nurses cared for sick people in the home and the community and also practiced as
nurse-midwives.
● Both female and male nursing was founded during the crusades.
● Women who were convicted of crimes were recruited into nursing in lieu of serving
jail sentences.
● Nursing as we know now began based of the beliefs of Florence Nightingale
○ Identifying the personal needs of the patient and the role of the nurse.
○ Established standard for hospital management
○ Established a respected occupation for women
○ Established nursing education
○ Component of nursing: Health and illness.
● Clara barton: Founder of the American Red Cross in 1882, served in the civil war.
● Mary Mahoney American’s first African American nurse graduate.
● Isabel Hampton Robb: Nursing leader in nursing and nursing education.

,● Dorethea Dix: advocate for the humane treatment of the mentally ill and wrote self
care theory.
● After WWII the nursing profession was upgraded. Nurses were now developed in
university and college settings, leading to degrees in nursing for men, women and
minorities.
● Nursing: describes the nurse as a person who nourishes, fosters,protects and who is
prepared to take care of sick, injured, older and dying people.
● American Nurses Association (ANA): Code of ethics, American nurse today and The
american nurse.
● National League for nurses(NLN): Open to everyone interested in nursing.
● American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN):Focus on quality educational
standards, influencing the nursing profession to improve health care.
● American Academy of Nursing (AAN): Advancing health policy and practice through the
generation, synthesis, and dissemination of nursing knowledge.
● National Student Nurses Association ( NSNA): For nursing students
● Standards: Allow nurses to carry out professional roles, serving as protection for the nurse,

, the patient and the institution.
● Nurse practice Act: Laws established in each state in the USA to regulate the practice of
nursing.
● Reciprocity: Allows a nurse to apply for and be endorsed as an RN by another state.
● Nursing process: Assessing, Diagnosing, Planning, Implementing, and evaluating.
● Healthy Nurse: One who actively focuses on creating and maintaining a balance and
synergy of physical, intellectual, emotional, social, spiritual, personal and
professional well-being.
● Compassion fatigue: Loss of satisfaction from providing good patient care.
● Burnout: Cumulative state of frustration with the work environment that develops over a
long time
● Secondary traumatic stress: Feeling of despair caused by the transfer of emotional distress
from a victim to a caregiver.
● Mindfulness: promotes healing as you pause and focus on the present and listen.
CHAPTER 2
● Traditional knowledge: Passed down from generation to generation.
● Authoritative Knowledge: Comes from an expert and is accepted as truth based on the
person’s perceived expertise.
● Scientific Knowledge: Obtained from a scientific method.
● Theory: Composed of a group of concepts that describes a pattern of reality.
● Concepts: Such as ideas, are abstract impressions organized into symbols or reality.
Describes objects, properties, and events.
● Conceptual framework or model: Group of concepts that follow an understandable pattern.
● Deductive reasoning: Examines a general idea and then considers specific action or idea.
● Inductive reasoning: Builds from specific ideas or actions to conclusion about general ideas.
● Nursing theory: To describe nursing; serves the purpose of describing, explaining, predicting,
and controlling desired outcomes.
○ Concepts: the person, the environment, health and nursing.
● General system theory: How to break things whole things into parts and then learn how the
parts work together in “system”
● Adaptation Theory: Defines adaptation as the adjustment of living matter to other living things
and to environmental conditions.
● Developmental Theory: Outlines the process of growth and development of humans as orderly
and predictable, beginning with conception and ending with death.
● Research: Examine carefully or to search again.
● Data: Systematic manner, to describe, explain and predict events.
● Nursing research: Encompasses research to improve the care of people in the clinical setting as
well as the broader study of people and the nursing professions.
● Scholarly Inquiry: to expand the body of knowledge that forms and advances the theory and

, practice of the discipline in all its spheres.
● Quantitative Research: Concepts of basic and applied research.
○ Variable: Varies and has different values
○ Dependent Variable: Variable being studied, result of the study
○ Independent variable: Cause or conditions that are manipulated or identified to determine
the effects on the dependent variable.
○ Hypothesis: Relationships between the independent and dependent variables that the
research expects to find.
○ Data: Information the researcher collects from subjects in the study (numbers)
○ Instruments: Devices used to collect and record the data.
● Types of quantitative:
○ Descriptive: To explore and describe events in real-life
○ Correlational: To examine the type and degree of relationship between two or
more variables.
○ Quasi-experimental: To examine cause-and-effect between selected variables;
conducted in clinical settings
○ Experimental: To examine cause-and-effect between selected variables under
highly controlled conditions.
● Basic research:To generate and refine theory.
● Applied research: to directly influence or improve clinical practices.
● Qualitative research: Methods of research conducted to gain insight by discovering meanings.
○ Phenomenology: to describe experiences as they lived by the subject being studied.
○ Grounded theory: discovery on how people describe their own reality and how their
beliefs are related to their actions in a social scene.
○ Ethnography: To examine issues of a culture that are of interest to n nursing.
○ Historical: Examines events of the past to increase understanding of the nursing profession
today.
● Research Utilization: A process of transforming research knowledge into practice.
● Evidence-based practice: A problem solving approach to making clinical decisions, using the best
evidence available.
● PICOT
○ P: Patient, population or problem of interest
○ I: Intervention of interest
○ C: Comparison of interest
○ O: Outcome of interest
○ T: Time
● Systematic reviews: summarize findings from multiple studies of a specific clinical practice
question or topic and recommended practices changes and future directions for research.
● Evidence-based practice guideline: Synthesize information from multiple studies and recommend

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Subido en
25 de mayo de 2026
Número de páginas
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Escrito en
2025/2026
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