Test Bank For Fundamentals Of Nursing: Human Health And Function (Craven, Fundamentals Of Nursing: Human Health And Function), 7th Edition
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Chapter 2- Health, Wellness, and Complementary Medicine
1.
A woman over the age of 40 years has an annual
mammogram. What level of prevention does this
represent?
A)
Primary prevention
B)
Secondary prevention
C)
Tertiary prevention
D)
Medical prevention
Ans:
B
Feedback:
Secondary prevention includes screening for those at
risk to develop illness or those who could be diagnosed
early in the process for prompt treatment.
2.
A patient inquires about the use of herbal therapy.
Which statement by the nurse is most accurate?
A)
โAll herbs are equal in purity, so purchase the
cheapest brand.โ
B)
โHerbs can have side effects and can interact with
prescription medications.โ
C)
โBe sure to pay attention to the packagingโs
therapeutic and prevention information.โ
D)
โIt is best if you select a licensed herbalist as a
practitioner.โ
Ans:
B
Feedback:
It is important for patients to understand that herbs can
have side effects and can interact with prescription
medications. Standardization of the herbโs constituents
is useful, but also limited because not all the
compounds or the required levels are known, so the
purity and dosage contents may not be equal between
herbs. Herbal products cannot make therapeutic and
prevention claims. There is no current licensing body
for herbalists.
3.
The nurse is caring for a terminally ill patient and asks
the patientโs permission to incorporate therapeutic touch
into the care provided. The nurseโs goal for this patient
is to:
A)
Prolong life
B)
Control the dying process
C)
Bring strength
D)
Produce relaxation
Ans:
D
Feedback:
While therapeutic touch does not cure the underlying
disease, it does seem to decrease pain, provide
relaxation, and help many dying people experience the
final transformation with peace and acceptance.
4.
The practitioner of therapeutic touch is listening with
his/her
A)
Ears
B)
Mind
C)
Soul
D)
Hands
Ans:
D
Feedback:
In the second phase of therapeutic touch, the
practitioner is listening with his or her hands.
5.
When practicing therapeutic touch, the practitioner
begins by performing which intervention?
A)
Calling to rebalance the soul
B)
Bringing the practitionerโs attention to an inward
peaceful consciousness
C)
Embracing the patient for energy
D)
Moving her hands 2 to 6 inches away from the
patientโs skin surface
Ans:
B
Feedback:
The first and most significant part of the therapeutic
touch is termed centering. The practitioner brings his or
her attention inward to a quiet, still, peaceful state of
consciousness.
6.
What nurse theorist developed therapeutic touch?
A)
Dorothea Orem
B)
Martha Rogers
C)
Jean Watson
D)
Dolores Krieger
Ans:
D
Feedback:
Therapeutic touch, a healing method used by thousands
of nurses and other professionals, was developed more
than 30 years ago by Dora Kunz, a healer, and Dolores
Krieger, an emeritus member of New York Universityโs
nursing faculty.
7.
A patient is asking for the nurse to explain acupuncture.
What would you tell the patient?
A)
Acupuncture is only done in Eastern countries
B)
Acupuncture is a dangerous option for the
treatment of disease
C)
Acupuncture is beneficial to creating a mood of
distraction
D)
Acupuncture is used to correct disharmony
Ans:
D
Feedback:
Acupuncture can be used to correct disharmony or
prevent disharmony from developing.
8.
A patient is in the last stage of labor. During each
contraction, she is focusing on her husbandโs voice and
a picture brought from home. She is demonstrating
which type of meditation?
A)
Concentrative
B)
Receptive
C)
Reflective
D)
Expressive
Ans:
A
Feedback:
Concentrative meditation is probably the most familiar.
The person focuses on an internal or external object.
Receptive meditation refers to being mindful and aware
of the present moment. Reflective meditation involves
gaining insight into oneโs own thoughts and
experiences. Expressive meditation involves actual
movement, such as dance.
9.
A patient is very anxious before an invasive procedure.
What CAM therapy would be most helpful to assist in
decreasing anxiety?
A)
Meditation
B)
Chinese medicine
C)
Acupuncture
D)
Herbs
Ans:
A
Feedback:
Meditation is a way to tune and train the mind, leading
to greater efficiency in everyday life. This will be most
helpful in assisting this patient to decrease the stress
level. Chinese medicine has a very broad base and
includes meditation, acupuncture, and herbs.
10.
Which of the following questions or statements to a
patient convey acceptance?
A)
โYou know supplements can be harmful. Do you
take any supplements?โ
B)
โHave you ever discussed taking vitamins and
supplements with your doctor?โ
C)
โWill you please share with me the prescription
medicines and vitamins you take?โ
D)
โWhat helpful herbal supplements are you
taking?โ
Ans:
C
Feedback:
Starting with the initial contact with a patient, the
nurse includes a basic assessment of his or her use of
CAM in any intake interview. The nurse asks about
vitamins and supplements as well as any healing
practices.
11.
When obtaining information for a database, which of
the following represents a nurse commitment and
interest in reflected integrative medicine (CAM)?
A)
โWhat types of foods do you consume in 24
hours?โ
B)
โDo you take any vitamins or minerals, and if so,
what?โ
C)
โWhat prescription medications do you take
daily?โ
D)
โWhat diseases do you suffer from and what are
your allergies?โ
Ans:
B
Feedback:
Starting with the initial contact with a patient, the
nurse includes a basic assessment of his or her use of
CAM in an intake interview. The nurse asks about
vitamins and supplements as well as any healing
practices.
12.
Which of the following forms of medicine combines
health promotion, establishment of a partnership with
the patient and practitioner, and captures an evolving
model of healthcare?
A)
Integrative healthcare and medicine
B)
Homeopathic healthcare and medicine
C)
Holistic healthcare and medicine
D)
Palliative healthcare and medicine
Ans:
A
Feedback:
Integrative medicine is the establishment of a
partnership between the patient and practitioner and
focuses on promoting health and preventing illnesses,
as well as treating disease. Integrative healthcare more
accurately reflects the cross-disciplinary reality and
progressive acceptance of a broader aspect of care.
13.
A patient suffers from chronic pain. The nurse
suggests the patient have monthly massages. This is an
example of
A)
Adjuvant medicine
B)
Palliative medicine
C)
Alternative medicine
D)
Allopathic medicine
Ans:
C
Feedback:
The use of conventional therapy as seen with CAM
includes the use of herbal medicine, massage,
megavitamins, self-help groups, folk remedies, energy
healing, and homeopathy.
14.
What term is defined as โthose practices that do not
form part of the dominant system for managing health
and diseaseโ?
A)
Alternative medicine
B)
Complementary health
C)
Homeopathic medicine
D)
Holistic healthcare
Ans:
A
Feedback:
Complementary or alternative medicine (CAM) was
introduced in 1996 and generally refers to โthose
practices that do not form part of the dominant system
for managing health and disease.โ Holistic
practitioners try to combine the proven successes of
Western modern medicine and a wide range of
therapies considered complementary or alternative
medicine.
15.
The mind and body are connected in the provision of
care. This statement describes
A)
Homeopathic care
B)
Holistic care
C)
Altruistic care
D)
Allopathic care
Ans:
B
Feedback:
Holistic interventions focus on the interrelated needs
of body, mind, emotions, and spirit.
16.
What type of practice was challenged by patients who
want to be treated as whole persons, not just as a
disease?
A)
Homeopathic care
B)
Holistic care
C)
Altruistic medicine
D)
Allopathic medicine
Ans:
D
Feedback:
Allopathic medicine was challenged by โpatients who
wanted to be treated as whole persons, not just as a
diseaseโ.
17.
To be an effective change agent for wellness, the nurse
must
A)
Skip breakfast to reduce calories
B)
Drink caffeinated beverages
C)
Lead a sedentary lifestyle
D)
Consume a diet low in fat
Ans:
D
Feedback:
Nurses focused on wellness advocate the use of
lifestyle modification skills that alleviate stress and
promote a state less susceptible to disease.
18.
An 80-year-old woman has had a cerebrovascular
accident. She has flaccidity of her right side with
aphasia. For this patient, which of the following
activities constitutes tertiary prevention?
A)
Assessment of her blood pressure
B)
Daily bleeding and clotting times
C)
Gait training and speech therapy
D)
Education on the symptoms of a CVA
Ans:
C
Feedback:
Tertiary prevention occurs when a person already has
been diagnosed with a long-term disease or disability.
19.
What level of prevention is noted when the nurse
educates a group of women who have school-age
children on self breast examinations?
A)
Educational prevention
B)
Primary prevention
C)
Secondary prevention
D)
Tertiary prevention
Ans:
B
Feedback:
Primary prevention focuses on the health of a person
with the goal of preventing disease or illness. Self breast examination education is primary prevention.
20.
A nurse assists the patient in the development of a
healthy lifestyle. The adoption of these lifestyle
changes in the patientโs life is considered
A)
Adaptation
B)
Self-care
C)
Self-esteem
D)
Health management
Ans:
B
Feedback:
Self-responsibility is paramount in Dorothea Oremโs
nursing theory, which focuses on self-care so that the
person can maintain life, health, and well-being.
21.
The bodyโs attempt to restore balance through selfregulatory mechanisms is termed
A)
Homeostasis
B)
Equilibration
C)
Self conception
D)
Biofeedback
Ans:
A
Feedback:
Homeostasis is the organismโs attempt to restore
balance. Equilibration is a distractor for this question.
Self-conception is related to the individualโs feelings
and attitudes about himself or herself. Biofeedback is a
relaxation technique.
22.
A patient enjoys high-calorie carbohydrates but
understands that they raise her blood sugar sharply and
ultimately cause the feeling of butterflies in her
stomach as her blood sugar decreases. This is
considered
A)
Health promotion
B)
Illness prevention
C)
Holism
D)
Self-awareness
Ans:
D
Feedback:
Self-awareness means knowing and caring for oneself,
recognizing oneโs strengths and limitations.
23.
The concept of holism is based on the belief that
A)
Individuals can be seen in an atomistic fashion
B)
Health is achieved through medical care
C)
Health is achieved by treatment from physicians
D)
Individuals cannot be seen apart from the
environment
Ans:
D
Feedback:
Holism is based on the belief that people cannot be
fully understood if examined solely in pieces apart
from their environment.
24.
Traditional medicineโs view of health is typically
explained by the health model termed
A)
High-level wellness
B)
Health belief model
C)
Wellness-illness continuum
D)
Holistic health model
Ans:
C
Feedback:
Traditional medicine identifies a neutral point at which
an individual is free of signs and symptoms of disease.
25.
What is defined as the recognition of health as an
ongoing process toward a personโs highest potential of
functioning?
A)
Illness
B)
Agent-host-environment
C)
Health belief model
D)
High-level wellness
Ans:
D
Feedback:
High-level wellness is defined as recognizing health as
an ongoing process toward a personโs highest potential
of functioning.
26.
A patient states, โI must be in poor health because I
am a senior citizen. Thatโs what my neighbor says and
she is older than I am. โ This statement is based on
which of the following factors?
A)
Age
B)
Gender
C)
Peer influence
D)
Illness factors
Ans:
C
Feedback:
Peer influence, personality characteristics, ethnicity,
and socioeconomic factors may affect a personโs
response to illness.
27.
When admitting an adolescent to the hospital, the
nurse anticipates that the patient will respond to
questions about his health beliefs based on his
A)
Age and developmental state
B)
Gender and medical history
C)
Peer influence and education
D)
Health promotion activities
Ans:
A
Feedback:
Age and developmental stage are important
considerations in the health belief model.
28.
What is a dynamic balance among the physical,
psychological, social, and spiritual aspects of a
personโs life?
A)
Health
B)
Wellness
C)
Holism
D)
Promotion
Ans:
B
Feedback:
Wellness is a dynamic balance among the physical,
psychological, social, and spiritual aspects of a
personโs life.
29.
What is a dynamic state in which a person constantly
adapts to changes in the internal and external
environment?
A)
Health
B)
Wellness
C)
Holism
D)
Infirmity
Ans:
A
Feedback:
Health is a dynamic state in which a person constantly
adapts to changes in the internal and external
environment.
30.
What is a state of complete physical, mental, and
social well-being, not merely the absence of disease or
infirmity?
A)
Health
B)
Wellness
C)
Holism
D)
Host
Ans:
A
Feedback:
The World Health Organization defines health as โa
state of complete physical, mental, and social wellbeing, not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.โ
31.
A nurse is educating women on the need for calcium
to prevent bone loss. What level of prevention does
this represent?
A)
Primary prevention
B)
Secondary prevention
C)
Tertiary prevention
D)
Residual prevention
Ans:
A
Feedback:
Primary prevention or primary healthcare involves the
education of patients in the prevention of disease.
32.
A patient has had a total knee replacement and is
receiving care that includes learning to walk with a
walker. What level of prevention is most applicable to
this patient?
A)
Primary prevention
B)
Secondary prevention
C)
Tertiary prevention
D)
Residual prevention
Ans:
C
Feedback:
Tertiary prevention and healthcare deals with
rehabilitation of the patient. Teaching the patient to
walk with a walker is tertiary prevention.
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