Questions with Verified Answers
orlandos theory - ANSWERS-created 1961
- theory explains the role of a nurse
- nurse uses own perception from their thoughts to discover what the patient needs
caused by their behavior
- patients behavior
- nurses reactions
- nurses activity
- non-observable - thought/ perception
- observable - nurses action
health belief model - ANSWERS-model originated in 1950
- help predict attitudes and actions around health issues
- focus on the patients perspective on health communication
- age, gender, ethnicity and religious beliefs
Rogerian model - ANSWERS- person- centered theory model, 1940s
- moved toward an empathetic approach that empowers and motivates the clients in
therapeutic process
- patients have more of a role in healthcare, decisions
model of social information processing - ANSWERS-deception of the emotional and
cognitive processes involved in responding to social cues
what are peplaus rules - ANSWERS1. stranger role (orientation)
2. resourse role (working phase)
3. teaching role (working phase)
4. councleing role (working phase)
5. surrogate role (working)
6. active leadership role (resolution/termination)
stranger role - ANSWERSnurse receives he patient as a stranger, but the nurse
provides a climate of trust
resource role - ANSWERSnurse gives info, answer questions and interoperate
teaching role - ANSWERSnurse serves as a teacher to the patient, giving instruction ad
training
, counseling role - ANSWERSnurse provides guidance and encouragement
active leadership role - ANSWERSassist patient in achieving responsibility for treatment
in a mutually satisfying way
surrogate role - ANSWERSwork on patients behalf and become advocate of patient
transference - ANSWERSprojection of ones attitude or feeling from the past on to
people in the present.
counter transference - ANSWERSrefers t the felling that a nurse may develop about
patients behavior that are rooted in the nurses past
genuineness - ANSWERS- ability to be oneself in a professional setting
- allows incorporation of shared human and authentic into nursing care
- show interest in patient during nursing care. they ask about the patients family, work
and hobbies
- allow patient to share life stories
Sullivan's factors for behvior - ANSWERS
patients bill of rights - ANSWERS- right to considerate and respectful care
- right to privacy, including confidentiality of all record of a patients care
- right to review all medical records
- right to refuse treatment
- right to be informed of resources in the hostpital
code of ethics for nurses - ANSWERS- American nurse association wrote this to define
what a nurse can/cannot do
- required ot adhere to scope of practice and knowledge
- serves as a standard and can be held accountable in court
reasonable standar of care - ANSWERScare that a reasonable, prudent nurse would
provide to a patient. used as benchmark in court of law
professional standards - ANSWERS
scope of practice - ANSWERS- refers to legal and ethical parameters of nursing
practice including direct the car, coordination of care with healthcare provider and
delegation of care with other personal
criminal negligence - ANSWERS- failing to protect a patient from harm
-preformig a nursing action that a reasonably prudent nurse would not preform
- failing to preform an action that a resonbly prudent nurse would preform