Stamler & Yiu's Community Health Nursing: A Canadian
Perspective [Print Replica] Kindle Edition – Test Bank
by Aliyah Dosani RN BN MPH PhD (Author), & 2 more
, TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. The History of Community Health Nursing in Canada
2. Policy, Politics, and Power in Health Care
3. Nursing Roles, Functions, and Practice Settings
4. Population Health and Public Health Nursing
5. Home Health Nursing in Canada
6. Advocacy, Ethical, and Legal Considerations
7. Theoretical Foundations of Community Health Nursing
8. Health Promotion
9. Anti-Racism Practice in Community Health
10. Evidence-Informed Practice in Community Health Nursing
11. Epidemiology
12. Communicable Diseases
13. Community Consultation, Assessment, and Partnership
14. Data Analyses in Community Health Nursing Practice
15. Community Health Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation
16. Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health
17. School Health
18. Family Nursing
19. Gender and Community Health
20. Two Spirit, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Intersex, and other Sexual- and
Gender-Diverse Clients
21. Older Adult Health
22. Indigenous Health
23. Community Mental Health
24. Rural and Remote Health
25. Continuing Care: Chronic and Hospice Palliative Care
26. Correctional Health
27. Ecological Determinants of Health and Planetary Health
28. Violence, Societal Structures, and Health
29. Poverty, Homelessness, and Food Insecurity
30. Substance Use
31. Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infections
32. Nursing in Emergency Preparedness and Disaster Response
33. Global Health
34. Critical Community Health Nursing: An Imperative
,Chapter 1: The History of Community Health Nursing
in Canada Community Health Nursing A Canadian
Perspective 6th Edition Stamler
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Who would a visiting nurse most likely work with in the early 1900s in Canada?
a. Families who could afford to pay
b. Poor and destitute families
c. The community
d. School children
Answer;: b (page 6)
2. Which community health nursing specialty emerged in early 20th-century Canada to combat
communicable disease, infant mortality, and childhood morbidity?
a. Visiting nursing
b. District nursing
c. Private duty nursing
d. Public health nursing
Answer;: d (page 4)
3. In the early 20th century, health departments were dissolved after a local emergency was over.
Which statement below characterizes the social attitude of the era?
a. Public health was the responsibility of doctors
b. Visiting nurses were responsible for community health
c. The state was not responsible for health care
d. Women should not be working outside of the family
Answer;: c (page 3)
, 4. What was the primary reason for the establishment of school health programs?
a. Prevent ill children from becoming dependent citizens
b. Promote the health of all children
c. Provide food for children who lived in poverty
d. Treat sick children so they could work and contribute to the family income
Answer;: b (page 4)
5. The earliest forms for healthcare in Canada were:
a. The practices of Aboriginal people
b. European settlers who were physicians
c. The wives of surgeons
d. The Grey Nuns-first community nursing
Answer;: a (page 2)
6. were Canada’s first community nursing order who made significant
contributions to providing access to health services, food, shelter, and education for the most
vulnerable:
a. The Victorian Order of Nurses
b. The Grey Nuns
c. Public Health Nurses
d. School Nurses
e. nursing sisters -first to provide health care in remote and frontier area)
Answer;: b (page 3)
7. The dual mandate of doing charitable work and providing affordable nursing care was held by
which agency?
a. The Margaret Scott Nursing Mission
b. The Victorian Order of Nurses-lady aberdeen led the development
c. Indian Health Services
d. Public Health Services
Answer;: b (page 4)
Perspective [Print Replica] Kindle Edition – Test Bank
by Aliyah Dosani RN BN MPH PhD (Author), & 2 more
, TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. The History of Community Health Nursing in Canada
2. Policy, Politics, and Power in Health Care
3. Nursing Roles, Functions, and Practice Settings
4. Population Health and Public Health Nursing
5. Home Health Nursing in Canada
6. Advocacy, Ethical, and Legal Considerations
7. Theoretical Foundations of Community Health Nursing
8. Health Promotion
9. Anti-Racism Practice in Community Health
10. Evidence-Informed Practice in Community Health Nursing
11. Epidemiology
12. Communicable Diseases
13. Community Consultation, Assessment, and Partnership
14. Data Analyses in Community Health Nursing Practice
15. Community Health Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation
16. Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health
17. School Health
18. Family Nursing
19. Gender and Community Health
20. Two Spirit, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Intersex, and other Sexual- and
Gender-Diverse Clients
21. Older Adult Health
22. Indigenous Health
23. Community Mental Health
24. Rural and Remote Health
25. Continuing Care: Chronic and Hospice Palliative Care
26. Correctional Health
27. Ecological Determinants of Health and Planetary Health
28. Violence, Societal Structures, and Health
29. Poverty, Homelessness, and Food Insecurity
30. Substance Use
31. Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infections
32. Nursing in Emergency Preparedness and Disaster Response
33. Global Health
34. Critical Community Health Nursing: An Imperative
,Chapter 1: The History of Community Health Nursing
in Canada Community Health Nursing A Canadian
Perspective 6th Edition Stamler
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Who would a visiting nurse most likely work with in the early 1900s in Canada?
a. Families who could afford to pay
b. Poor and destitute families
c. The community
d. School children
Answer;: b (page 6)
2. Which community health nursing specialty emerged in early 20th-century Canada to combat
communicable disease, infant mortality, and childhood morbidity?
a. Visiting nursing
b. District nursing
c. Private duty nursing
d. Public health nursing
Answer;: d (page 4)
3. In the early 20th century, health departments were dissolved after a local emergency was over.
Which statement below characterizes the social attitude of the era?
a. Public health was the responsibility of doctors
b. Visiting nurses were responsible for community health
c. The state was not responsible for health care
d. Women should not be working outside of the family
Answer;: c (page 3)
, 4. What was the primary reason for the establishment of school health programs?
a. Prevent ill children from becoming dependent citizens
b. Promote the health of all children
c. Provide food for children who lived in poverty
d. Treat sick children so they could work and contribute to the family income
Answer;: b (page 4)
5. The earliest forms for healthcare in Canada were:
a. The practices of Aboriginal people
b. European settlers who were physicians
c. The wives of surgeons
d. The Grey Nuns-first community nursing
Answer;: a (page 2)
6. were Canada’s first community nursing order who made significant
contributions to providing access to health services, food, shelter, and education for the most
vulnerable:
a. The Victorian Order of Nurses
b. The Grey Nuns
c. Public Health Nurses
d. School Nurses
e. nursing sisters -first to provide health care in remote and frontier area)
Answer;: b (page 3)
7. The dual mandate of doing charitable work and providing affordable nursing care was held by
which agency?
a. The Margaret Scott Nursing Mission
b. The Victorian Order of Nurses-lady aberdeen led the development
c. Indian Health Services
d. Public Health Services
Answer;: b (page 4)