A) Community awareness
B) Health facilities
C) Health care manpower
D) Vital statistics
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The community's commitment to health
B) Health risk profiles of selected aggregates
C) Statistics of morbidity and mortality in comparison with similar communities
D) Treatment and service use patterns from local health agencies and care providers
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Administering vaccinations to preschoolers
B) Analyzing community problems to determine the best interventions
C) Establishing an elder-care center for older adults living with family members who work
D) Teaching anger management skills to a group of teens in a halfway house
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Commitment to current processes and policies
B) High socioeconomic status in the community as a whole
C) Long history of dependence on the community health agency and its staff
D) Minimal level of social participation by community members
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The expected effect or outcome of each possible intervention
B) How interested others are in helping in any particular intervention
C) The nurse's own interest in implementing each intervention
D) The likelihood that the intervention will resolve the problem
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) All monitored patients will receive abortive therapy for lethal dysrhythmias within 3 minutes of dysrhythmia recognition.
B) Of mothers receiving nutrition counseling, 80% will identify five sources of calcium by the end of class.
C) 95% of children will be immunized by 1 year of age.
D) There will be a 25% reduction in health disparities by 2015.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) To avoid confronting the community until the nurse is thoroughly oriented
B) To become familiar with previous goals and priorities of the agency
C) To help get a better understanding of the assigned community
D) To save time and effort and perhaps have new insights
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Addicts don't have the willpower to change their behavior.
B) It is too rewarding to continue the behavior for a person to be able to change.
C) Laws and policies must reward good healthy behaviors and punish unhealthy behaviors to help individuals recognize the importance of change.
D) Society must offer healthy choices, offer support, and practice helpful policies.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Community's immigrant group activist
B) Federal senators and representatives
C) Health board members
D) Local politicians such as the town mayor
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Assessment phase
B) Planning phase
C) Implementation phase
D) Evaluation phase
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) To ensure that others agree with the nurse's plans for interventions
B) To confirm the nurse's initial findings and conclusions
C) To encourage community partners to feel they "own" the data
D) To generate nonstatistical data such as values, beliefs, and perceived needs
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) To allow participant observation by the nurse
B) To ensure that the nurse would care about her intervention outcomes
C) To maximize convenience and minimize commuting time for the nurse
D) To save gasoline in these difficult economic times
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Asking those with whom the nurse interacts in the course of daily living their perception of the community (e.g., clerks in grocery stores or pharmacies)
B) Attending community events such as festivals or fairs and interacting with participants
C) Becoming involved in and contributing to volunteer community organizations
D) Completing a comprehensive physical assessment on nearby neighbors
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) A problem that affects the most disadvantaged residents in the community
B) A problem that is very easy and inexpensive to address
C) A problem that is of high concern to the community
D) A problem in an area in which the nurse has a great deal of expertise
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) A geographic area or political division under common leadership
B) A group sharing a common bond such as a profession or occupation
C) A group working together to confront a common problem
D) A social group with common goals within a geographic area
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Defining variables relevant to current public health problems
B) Obtaining and interpreting information regarding risks and benefits to the community
C) Implementing nursing care and subsequent evaluation outcomes
D) Maintaining public health departments throughout the United States
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Assessing the health care services available in a community
B) Establishing screening programs to diagnosis diseases as early as possible so treatment can begin
C) Implementing health promotion activities such as education programs
D) Planning for new programs to be developed based on identified needs
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Changes in staffing patterns in the health agency
B) Demographic data
C) Education and school statistics
D) Environmental factors
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) On the second trip, the nurse can carefully confirm the results of the first assessment.
B) Repeating the experience ensures that the nurse absorbed all the relevant details.
C) Driving through twice allows the nurse to see the community when many residents are at work or at school and then again when most are at home.
D) When leaving in the evening, the nurse has more time to write down the results of the earlier assessment.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Providing care to an active caseload of 50 families in the neighborhood
B) Inviting all the parents of asthmatic children in the school to meet together for mutual support
C) Sharing assessment findings and health goals with every community group that will listen
D) Writing articles for the local newspaper highlighting the various programs and services of the local health department
Correct Answer
verified
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