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Viewing:

Foundations: Fundamentals of Nursing, Key Points - Chapter 3, 20, 24, and 25

front 1

Principles of public health nursing practice focus on

back 1

assisting individuals and communities with achieving a healthy living environment

front 2

Essential public health functions include

back 2

community assessment, policy development, and access to resources

front 3

When population-based health care services are effective,

back 3

there is a greater likelihood that the higher levels of services will contribute efficiently to health improvement of the population.

front 4

The community health nurse

back 4

cares for the community as a whole and assesses the individual or family within the context of the community.

front 5

Successful community health nursing practice

back 5

involves building relationships with the community and being responsive to changes within the community.

front 6

The community-based nurse’s competence is

back 6

based on decision making at the level of the individual patient.

front 7

The special needs of vulnerable populations are

back 7

a challenge that nurses face in caring for these patients’ increasingly complex acute and chronic health conditions.

front 8

A community-based nurse is

back 8

competent as a caregiver, collaborator, educator, counselor, change agent, patient advocate, case manager, and epidemiologist.

front 9

Patients are more likely to accept a change if

back 9

it is more advantageous, compatible, realistic, and easy to adopt.

front 10

Evaluation is a step of the nursing process that includes two components:

back 10

an examination of a condition or situation and a judgment as to whether change has occurred.

front 11

During evaluation apply critical thinking to

back 11

make clinical decisions and redirect nursing care to best meet patient needs.

front 12

Positive evaluations occur

back 12

when you meet desired outcomes and they lead you to conclude that your interventions were effective.

front 13

Criterion-based standards for evaluation are

back 13

the physiological, emotional, and behavioral responses that are a patient’s goals and expected outcomes.

front 14

Evaluative measures are

back 14

assessment skills or techniques that you use to collect data for determining if outcomes were met.

front 15

It sometimes becomes necessary to collect evaluative measures over time to

back 15

determine if a pattern of change exists

front 16

When interpreting findings, you

back 16

compare the patient’s behavioral responses and physiological signs and symptoms that you expect to see with those actually seen from your evaluation and judge the degree of agreement.

front 17

Documentation of evaluative findings

back 17

allows all members of the health care team to know whether or not a patient is progressing.

front 18

A patient’s nursing diagnoses, priorities, and interventions sometimes

back 18

change as a result of evaluation.

front 19

Evaluation examines two factors:

back 19

the appropriateness of the interventions selected and the correct application of the intervention.

front 20

Communication is

back 20

a powerful therapeutic tool and an essential nursing skill that influences others and achieves positive health outcomes.

front 21

Effective interdisciplinary communication is essential to

back 21

provide safe transitions and care.

front 22

Effective communication is critical in

back 22

promoting collaboration and teamwork providing patient-centered care.

front 23

Critical thinking facilitates communication through

back 23

creative inquiry, focused self-awareness and awareness of others, purposeful analysis, and control of perceptual biases.

front 24

Communication is most effective when the receiver and sender

back 24

accurately perceive the meaning of one another’s messages.

front 25

The sender’s and receiver’s physical and developmental status, perceptions, values, emotions, knowledge, sociocultural background, roles, and environment all influence

back 25

message transmission.

front 26

Effective verbal communication requires

back 26

appropriate intonation, clear and concise phrasing, proper pacing of statements, and proper timing and relevance of a message.

front 27

Effective nonverbal communication complements and strengthens

back 27

the message conveyed by verbal communication.

front 28

Nurses use intrapersonal, interpersonal, transpersonal, small-group, and public interaction

back 28

to achieve positive change and health goals.

front 29

Nurses strengthen helping relationships by

back 29

establishing trust, empathy, autonomy, confidentiality, and professional competence.

front 30

Effective communication techniques are facilitative and tend to encourage

back 30

the other person openly expressing ideas, feelings, or concerns.

front 31

Ineffective communication techniques are

back 31

inhibiting and tend to block the other person’s willingness to openly express ideas, feelings, or concerns.

front 32

Blend social and informational interactions to help your patients explore feelings and manage health issues.

back 32

with therapeutic communication techniques

front 33

Older adults with sensory, motor, or cognitive impairments require the adaptation of

back 33

communication techniques to compensate for their loss of function and special needs.

front 34

Patients with impaired verbal communication require

back 34

special consideration and alterations in communication techniques to facilitate sending, receiving, and interpreting messages.

front 35

Desired outcomes for patients with impaired verbal communication include

back 35

increased satisfaction with interpersonal interactions, the ability to send and receive clear messages, and attention to and accurate interpretation of verbal and nonverbal cues.

front 36

The nurse ensures that patients, families, and communities receive information needed to

back 36

promote, restore, and maintain optimal health.

front 37

Teaching is most effective when it is

back 37

responsive to a learner’s needs.

front 38

Teaching is a form of interpersonal communication, with the teacher and learner

back 38

actively involved in a process that increases the learner’s knowledge and skills.

front 39

The ability to learn depends on a person’s

back 39

physical and cognitive attributes.

front 40

The ability to attend to the learning process depends on physical

back 40

comfort and anxiety levels and the presence of environmental distraction.

front 41

A person’s health beliefs influence the willingness to

back 41

gain knowledge and skills necessary to maintain health.

front 42

Use of a theory (e.g., social learning theory) or theoretical concepts (e.g., self-efficacy)

back 42

enhances learning.

front 43

Time teaching so it occurs when

back 43

a patient is ready to learn.

front 44

Patients of different age-groups require

back 44

different teaching strategies because of developmental capabilities.

front 45

Involve patients actively in

back 45

all aspects of teaching plans.

front 46

Nurses use learning objectives to

back 46

set learning priorities.

front 47

A combination of teaching methods improves the learner’s

back 47

attentiveness and involvement.

front 48

A teacher is more effective when presenting information that

back 48

builds on a learner’s existing knowledge.

front 49

Effective teachers use

back 49

positive reinforcement.

front 50

Older adults learn most effectively when

back 50

information is paced slowly and presented in small amounts.

front 51

Evaluate a patient’s learning by

back 51

observing performance of expected learning behaviors under desired conditions.

front 52

Effective documentation describes the entire process of

back 52

patient education, promotes continuity of care, and demonstrates that educational standards have been met.