TEST BANK
Women's Health
A Primary Care Clinical Guide
Diane Schadewald, Ursula Pritham, Ellis Youngkin, Marcia Davis, Catherine Juve
5th Edition
, Test Bank - Women's Health: A Primary Care Clinical Guide 5th Edition (Schadewald, 2020)
Table of Contents
PART I: WOMEN, HEALTH, AND THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
Chapter 1: Access to Women's Health Care in the United States: Affordability, Equity, Rights
Chapter 2: Women's Development into the 21st Century
Chapter 3: Epidemiology, Diagnostic Methods, and Procedures for Women's Health
Chapter 4: Assessing Adolescent Women's Health
Chapter 5: Assessing Adult Women's Health
Chapter 6: Assessing Older Women's Health
PART II: PROMOTION OF WELLNESS FOR WOMEN
Chapter 7: Women and Sexuality
Chapter 8: Health Needs of Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Populations
Chapter 9: Health Needs of Women with Disabilities
Chapter 10: Integrating Wellness: Complementary Health Approaches and Women's Health
PART III: PROMOTION OF GYNECOLOGIC HEALTH CARE
Chapter 11: Menstruation and Related Problems and Concerns
Chapter 12: Managing Contraception and Family Planning
Chapter 13: Infertility
Chapter 14: Vaginitis and Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Chapter 15: Women and HIV
Chapter 16: Common Gynecologic Pelvic Disorders
Chapter 17: Breast Health
Chapter 18: The Menopausal Transition
PART IV: PROMOTION OF WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE DURING PREGNANCY
Chapter 19: Promotion of Women's Health Care During Pregnancy
Chapter 20: Maternal Conditions Impacting Risk in Pregnancy
Chapter 21: Assessing Fetal Well-Being
Chapter 22: Postpartum and Lactation
PART V: PRIMARY CARE CONDITIONS AFFECTING WOMEN'S HEALTH
Chapter 23: Common Medical Problems: Cardiovascular Through Hematological Disorders
Chapter 24: Common Medical Problems: Musculoskeletal Injuries Through Urinary Tract Disorders
Chapter 25: Psychosocial Health Concerns for Women
Chapter 26: Substance Use Disorders and Women
, Test Bank - Women's Health: A Primary Care Clinical Guide 5th Edition (Schadewald, 2020)
Chapter 1 Access to Women’s Health Care in the United States: Affordability, Equity, Rights
1. Which health occupation has the highest percentage of women?
A. Pharmacists
B. Physical therapists
C. Registered nurses
D. Dental hygienists
Answer: D
2. Which health occupation has the lowest percentage of women?
A. Physicians
B. Dentists
C. Pharmacists
D. Physical therapists
Answer: B
3. Which health profession has the largest number of workers?
A. Health aides
B. Physicians
C. Licensed practical nurses
D. Registered nurses
Answer: D
4. Which of the following are certifications available in advanced practice registered nursing?
(Select all that apply.)
, Test Bank - Women's Health: A Primary Care Clinical Guide 5th Edition (Schadewald, 2020)
A. Certified nurse midwife
B. Certified registered nurse anesthetist
C. Certified nurse pharmacologist
D. Clinical nurse specialist
E. Nurse practitioner
Answer: A, B, D, E
5. What level of education is required to become a licensed practical nurse?
A. 2-year master’s degree (in addition to a 4-year bachelor’s degree)
B. 4-year bachelor’s degree
C. 2-year associate’s degree
D. 1-year certificate or diploma
Answer: D
6. What percentage of physicians and surgeons in the United States in 2014 were women?
A. 27%
B. 37%
C. 47%
D. 57%
Answer: B
7. What medical specialty has the highest percentage of women?
A. General pediatrics
B. Obstetrics and gynecology
C. Orthopedic surgery
D. Urology
, Test Bank - Women's Health: A Primary Care Clinical Guide 5th Edition (Schadewald, 2020)
Answer: A
8. On an average, the income of female physicians is what percentage of that of male physicians?
A. 59%
B. 79%
C. 99%
D. 109%
Answer: A
9. What level of education is required to become a pharmacist?
A. 6-year doctorate degree
B. 2-year master’s degree (in addition to a 4-year bachelor’s degree)
C. 4-year bachelor’s degree
D. 2-year associate’s degree
Answer: A
10. Which of the following is the median income of dentists in the United States (2012)?
A. $89,310
B. $109,310
C. $129,310
D. $149,310
Answer: D
11. Which of the following are the current trends in dentistry? (Select all that apply.)
A. More specialists than generalists
B. Research linking oral health to overall health
C. Focus on treatment of disease rather than prevention
D. Expected growth of 18% from 2014 to 2024
E. Increasing demand for dental implants, bridges, and cosmetic services
, Test Bank - Women's Health: A Primary Care Clinical Guide 5th Edition (Schadewald, 2020)
Answer: B, D, E
12. Which allied health occupation is projected to be the fastest growing?
A. Health information technicians
B. Nursing aides
C. Occupational therapists
D. Paramedics
Answer: A
13. One in five workers in which of the following allied health occupation is at or below the
federal poverty
level?
A. Medical assistant
B. Home health aide
C. Radiology technician
D. Speech-language pathologist
Answer: B
14. Veronica is a registered nurse who pours herself into her job. She works long hours without
complaint andstrives to do her best. Often, she maintains a cheerful, caring, and kind demeanor on
the outside whilefeeling exhausted and frustrated on the inside. The effort it takes to maintain this
front before her patientsresults in a lot of stress. This phenomenon can best be described as which
of the following?
A. Identity crisis
B. Psychological disparity
C. Emotional dissonance
D. Gender discrimination
Answer: C
15. Tests of implicit racial bias among health professionals have revealed which of the following?
A. An unconscious preference for Whites over Blacks
B. Use of racially charged, derogatory language
, Test Bank - Women's Health: A Primary Care Clinical Guide 5th Edition (Schadewald, 2020)
C. Sharing of racist jokes
D. Lower pay for racial minorities
Answer: A
Chapter 2 Women’s Development into the 21st Century
1. To enhance women’s health care in the 21st century, researchers should do which of the
following? (Select
all that apply.)
A. Design studies in collaboration with women
B. Analyze changes in women’s health data relative to men’s
C. Include homogeneous populations of women in studies
D. Translate research findings into clinical and public health practice
E. Focus on treatment approaches equally applicable to men and women
Answer: A, B, D
2. Historically, gender has been defined by which of the following? (Select all that apply.)
A. Self-identification
B. Appropriate roles
C. Division of labor
D. Economic power
E. Political influence
Answer: B, C, D, E
3. Hammarstrӧm et al. propose a model of sex and gender that includes which of the following
concepts?
(Select all that apply.)
A. Binary sexuality based on one’s chromosomes
B. Sex, interacting with gender, as a continuum
, Test Bank - Women's Health: A Primary Care Clinical Guide 5th Edition (Schadewald, 2020)
C. Biologically determined sex based on the effects of sex hormones on reproductive organ
development
D. Sex and gender as an integration of body, mind, and context
E. Intersectionality and embodiment as factors significantly affecting sex andgender
Answer: B, D, E
4. Which of the following is the best example of how gender bias has affected the health and health
care of
women?
A. Similar rates of mental illness being found in men and women
B. Treatment outcomes among women varying based on patient compliance
C. Association of patient income level with type of diagnosis
D. Disproportionately more psychotropic medications being prescribed to women than men
Answer: D
5. Krieger has proposed which of the following regarding sex, gender, and health? (Select all that
apply.)
A. Gender and sex played no significant role in determining health outcomes for women
B. Gender relations influence the expression and the interpretation of biological traits
C. Sex-linked biological characteristics contribute to gender differentials in health
D. Traditional perspectives on gender and sex have resulted in better health outcomes for women
than for
men
E. Equitable gender relationships have resulted in similar health outcomes in men and women
Answer: B, C
6. When did women’s health scholarship begin to flourish?
A. 1960s
B. 1970s
C. 1980s