GYNECOLOGIC
for
HEALTH CARE
WITH AN INTRODUCTION TO PRENATAL AND
POSTPARTUM CARE
4th Edition
By Kerri Durnell Schuiling, Frances E. Likis
,Table of Contents
SECTION I INTRODUCTION TO WOMEN’S GYNECOLOGIC HEALTH
Chapter 1 A Feminist Perspective of Women’s Health
Chapter 2 Racism and Health Disparities
Chapter 3 Women’s Growth and Development Across the Life Span
Chapter 4 Using Evidence to Support Quality Clinical Practice
SECTION II HEALTH ASSESSMENT AND PROMOTION
Chapter 5 Health Promotion
Chapter 6 Gynecologic Anatomy and Physiology
Chapter 7 Gynecologic History and Physical Examination
Chapter 8 Male Sexual and Reproductive Health
Chapter 9 Periodic Screening and Health Maintenance
Chapter 10 Women’s Health After Bariatric Surgery
Chapter 11 Gynecologic Health Care for Lesbian, Bisexual, and Queer Women and Transgender and Non-
Binary Individuals
Chapter 12 Sexuality and Sexual Health
Chapter 13 Contraception
Chapter 14 Menopause
Chapter 15 Intimate Part ner Violence
Chapter 16 Sexual Assault
SECTION III GYNECOLOGIC HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT
Chapter 17 Breast Conditions
Chapter 18 Alterations in Sexual Function
Chapter 19 Pregnancy Diagnosis, Decision-Making Support, and Resolution
Chapter 20 Infertility
Chapter 21 Gynecologic Infections
Chapter 22 Sexually Transmitted Infections
Chapter 23 Urinary Tract Infections
Chapter 24 Urinary Incontinence
Chapter 25 Menstrual-Cycle Pain and Premenstrual Conditions
Chapter 26 Normal and Abnormal Uterine Bleeding
Chapter 27 Hyperandrogenic Disorders
Chapter 28 Benign Gynecologic Conditions
Chapter 29 Gynecologic Cancers
Chapter 30 Chronic Pelvic Pain
SECTION IV INTRODUCTION TO PRENATAL AND POSTPARTUM CARE
Chapter 31 Preconception Care
Chapter 32 Anatomic and Physiologic Adaptations of Normal Pregnancy
Chapter 33 Diagnosis of Pregnancy and Overview of Prenatal Care
Chapter 34 Common Complications of Pregnancy
Chapter 35 Overview of Postpartum Care
, Gynecologic Health Care: With an Introduction to Prenatal and Postpartum Care 4th Edition
Test Bank
Chapter 1 A Feminist Perspective of Women's Health &
Chapter 2 Racism and Health Disparities
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS
Select the one correct answer to each of the following questions.
• Which of the following best defines the term “gender” as used in this text?
• A person’s sex
• A person’s sex as defined by society
• A societal response to a person’s self-representation as a man or woman
• A person’s biological presentation as defined by himself or herself
• Which factor bears most on women’s health care today?
• The complexity of women’s health
• Women’s status and position in society
• Population growth
• The economy
• Why is acknowledging the oppression of women more
difficult within Western societies?
• The multiplicity of minority groups complicates the issue.
• The availability of health care makes acknowledgment more difficult.
• The diversity of the news media clouds the issue.
• Affluence and increased opportunities mask oppression.
• Which of the following most accurately defines “oppression” as used in the text?
• Not having a choice
• Not having a voice
• An act of tyranny
• A feeling of being burdened
• In what way does a model of care based on a feminist perspective
contrast sharply with a biomedical model?
• It provides a forum for the exploration of gender issues.
• It seeks equal distribution of power within the healthcare interaction.
• It emphasizes women’s rights.
, • It opens new avenues for women’s health care.
• Gender is rooted in and shaped by .
• society, biology
• self-representation, societal expectations
• biology, environment and experience
• biology, hormones
• Women’s health risks, treatments, and approaches are not always
based in science and biology because
• they are often based on outdated treatments and approaches.
• they are determined by social expectations and gender assumptions.
• they often rely on alternative treatments and approaches.
• scientific research often fails to take women into consideration.
• Reproductive rights were added to the World Health
Organization’s human rights framework in the last ?
• 5 years
• 10 years
• 20 years
• 40 years
• “Safe Motherhood” was added to the human rights framework in order to
• address maternal morbidity and mortality on a global level
• meet a legal obligation
• correct an injustice
• correct an oversight
• What is a chief failing of the biomedical model in regards to women’s health care?
• Its reliance on studies comprised exclusively of males
• Its consideration of women as central the model
• Its emphasis on science and medicine
• Its limited definition of “health” as “the absence of disease”
• The social model of health places the focus of health on
• the community.
• the individual.
• environmental conditions.
• scientific research.
• Which question below supports the strategy: “Identify women’s
agency in the midst of social constraint and the biomedical paradigm.”?
• “Are ‘all women’ the same?”
• “Why do you care about the issue?”
• “Are women really victims or are they acting with agency?”