RCC nursing 11 exam 4 – Flashcards

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What are the four points of skin assessment history
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Activity status, nutritional state, elimination pattern, cognitive state
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In the acute care setting, skin assessments should be performed when
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On admission and then every 24 hours, or if the patient's condition changes
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In the long term care setting, skin assessments should be performed when
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On admission and then weekly for 4 weeks then quarterly or whenever the pt's condition changes
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In the home health care setting, skin assessments should be performed when
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On admission and then on every visit
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Clear and watery drainage composed of serous portion of blood
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Serous drainage
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Fluid drainage containing a large number of red blood cells and looks like blood
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Sanguineous drainage
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Fluid drainage mixed with serum and rbc's, which is light pink to blood tinged in color
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Serosanguineous drainage
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Fluid drainage composed of white blood cells, liquified dead tissue debris and both dead and live bacteria. Drainage is thick, often musty or foul odor, and varies in color. (Such as dark yellow or green)
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Purulent drainage
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Provides sinus tract after incision and drainage of abscess, in abdominal surgery
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Penrose drain
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For bile drainage after gallbladder surgery
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T-tube drain
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Decreases dead space by collecting drainage after breast or abdominal surgery
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Jackson-Pratt drain
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Decreases dead space by collecting drainage after abdominal or orthopedic surgery
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Hemovac
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Allowing healing from base of wound after removal of hemorrhoids or on infected wounds
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Gauze, iodoform gauze, Nugauze
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What laboratory criteria indicates nutritional factors indicating risk for decubitus ulcers
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Albumin <3.2 mg/dL, pre albumin 8.1%, glucose > 120
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procedure consisting of placing very thin, short, sterile needles at particular acupoints, believed to be centers of nerve and vascular tissue, along a meridian to either increase or decrease the flow of chi along the meridian, restoring the balance of yin and yang, and thereby contributing to healing
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Acupuncture
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Methods not included in the conventional scope of medicine
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Alternative modalities
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Treating disease with a conventional method using drugs having opposite effects than the symptoms
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Allopathic medicine
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A characteristic feature of neuropathic pain, is pain that occurs after a weak or nonpainful stimuli, such as a light touch or a cold drink, which normally should not cause pain
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Allodynia
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Consists of seven layers that surround the body and relate to the chakras
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Aura
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A science of life that delineates the diet, medicines, and behaviors that are beneficial or harmful for life and considers that balance among people, the environment, and the larger cosmos is integral to human health
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Ayurveda
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Concentrated areas of energy aligned vertically in the body, which relate to each other as well as to specific areas of the body/mind/spirit
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Chakra
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C.A.T The belief that Mind, body, and spirit are integrated and together influence health and illness
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Complementary and Alternative Therapy
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A theory and philosophy that focuses on connections and interactions between parts of the whole
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Holism
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nursing practice built on a holistic philosophy
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Holistic nursing
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Pain lasting from seconds up to 6 months
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Acute pain
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Pain lasting longer than 6 months, may be intermittent or continuous
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Chronic pain
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drugs typically used for other purposes, but also used to enhance the effects of opioids by providing additional pain relief
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Adjuvant
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Acting to relieve pain
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Analgesic
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Temporary flare-up of moderate to severe pain that occurs even when the patient is taking around-the-clock medication for persistent pain
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Breakthrough pain
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Superficial pain usually involving the skin or the subcutaneous tissue
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Cutaneous pain
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The endorphin having the most potent analgesic effect
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Dynorphin
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Morphine-like substances released by the body that appear to alter the perception of pain
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Endorphin
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Opioids that are widespread throughout the brain and dorsal horn of the spinal cord and are believed to reduce pain sensation by inhibiting the release of substance P
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Enkephalins
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Belief that one's own ideas, beliefs, and practices are best, superior, or most preferred to those of others; using one's cultural norms as the standard to evaluate others' beliefs
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Ethnocentrism
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Period in chronic illness when the symptoms of the disease reappear
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Exacerbation
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Theory that explains that excitatory pain stimuli carried by small-diameter nerve fibers can be blocked by inhibiting signals carried by large-diameter nerve fibers
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Gate Control Thoery
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Severe pain that is extremely resistant to relief measures
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Intractable
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Process by which the sensation of pain is inhibited or modified
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Modulation
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endogenous opioid chemical regulators that appear to have analgesic activity and alter pain perception
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Neuromodulators
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Pain that results as a direct consequence of a lesion or disease affecting abnormal functioning of the peripheral nervous system (PNS) or central nervous system (CNS)
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Neuropathic pain
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Substances that either excite or inhibit target nerve cells
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Neurotransmitters
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Pain receptors
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Nociceptors
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Pain from a normal process that results in noxious stimuli being perceived as painful
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Nociceptive pain
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More correct term for narcotic analgesics, since these drugs act by binding to opiate receptor sites in the central nervous system
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Opioid
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amount of stimulation required before a person experiences the sensation of pain
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Pain threshold
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Point beyond which a person is no longer willing to endure pain (i.e., pain of greater duration or intensity)
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Pain tolerance
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Conscious process of organizing and interpreting data from the senses into meaningful information
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Perception
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Sensation of pain without demonstrable physiologic or pathologic substance; commonly observed after the amputation of a limb
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Phantom Pain
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Phenomenon in which the body physiologically becomes accustomed to an opioid and suffers withdrawal symptoms if the opioid is suddenly removed or the dose is rapidly decreased
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Physical dependence
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Latin word meaning, "I shall please"; an inactive substance that gives satisfaction to the person using it
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Placebo
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Pain for which no physical cause can be identified
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Psychogenic pain
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Pain in an area removed from that in which stimulation has its origin
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Referred pain
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Period in a chronic illness when the disease is present, but the person does not experience symptoms of the disease
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Remission
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Pain originating in structures in the body's external wall
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Somatic pain
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Occurrence of the body's becoming accustomed to an opioid and needing a larger dose each time for pain relief
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Tolerance
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Activation of pain receptors, histamine is released, substance P released, prostoglandins released, bradykinin released, glutamine released
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Transduction
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Conduction of pain sensations from the site of an injury or inflammation along clear and unclear pathways to the spinal cord and then on to higher centers
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Transmission
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Pain originating in the internal organs in the thorax, cranium, or abdomen
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Visceral pain
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Physical suffering of a person due to injury or illness
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Pain
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Physiological, Behavioral, and affective
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Three types of pain
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Pain syndrome follows an acute central nervous system infection, such as herpes zoster (shingles). The herpes syndrome is characterized by a vesicular eruption and neuralgic pain, which is usually unilateral and encircles the body in band-like clusters. The severity of the pain may be mild to severe. Intractable pain may persist for months to years
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Postherpetic neuralgia
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Pain occurs in the area of a partially injured peripheral nerve (the most common lesions are of the brachial plexus or median or sciatic nerve). The pain is described as burning, severe, diffuse, and persistent and is elicited by minimal movement or touch of the affected area. It increases with repeated stimulation and continues even after stimulation ceases.
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Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (Causalgia)
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Paroxysms of lightning-like stabs of intense pain in the distribution of one or more divisions of the trigeminal nerve, the fifth cranial nerve. Pain is usually experienced in the mouth, gums, lips, nose, cheek, chin, and surface of the head and may be triggered by everyday activities like talking, eating, shaving, or brushing one's teeth
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Trigeminal Neuralgia
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A common complication of long-term diabetes mellitus. Metabolic and vascular changes result in damage to peripheral and autonomic nerves. Sensory loss can result when peripheral nerves are involved and eventually lead to injury progressing to infection and gangrene. Symptoms include sensations of numbness, prickling, or tingling (paresthesias).
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Diabetic Neuropathy
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The Numeric Rating Scale, the verbal descriptor scale, and the Faces Pain Scale-Revised are recommended for what age group. This age group commonly prefers a vertical pain scale such as the Iowa Pain Thermometer
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Older adults
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PCA: A machine allowing patients to self medicate
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Patient Controlled Analgesia
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CSI: A method of medication administration.
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Continuous Subcutaneous Infusion
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Changes in attitudes, values, and feelings
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Affective learning
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The study of teaching adults
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Andragogy
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Storing and recalling of new knowledge in the brain
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Cognitive Learning
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Pact made between two persons or parties for the achievement of mutually set goals
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Contractual Agreement
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Giving guidance, assisting with problem solving
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Counseling
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Predictable patterns of behavior and change occurring throughout the lifespan
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Developmental Crisis
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Planned teaching based on learner objectives
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Formal Teaching
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Ability to read, understand, and act on health information
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Health Literacy
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Unplanned teaching sessions dealing with the patient's immediate learning needs and concerns
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Informal teaching
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Increasing one's knowledge; having one's behavior changed in a measurable way as a result of an experience
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Learning
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Patient's willingness to engage in the teaching-learning process (emotional readiness) and experiential readiness to begin the challenge of learning
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Learning Readiness
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An ineffective teaching strategy that uses criticism or punishment
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Negative Reinforcement
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A registered nurse who integrates coaching competencies into any setting or specialty area of practice to facilitate a process of change or development that assists individuals or groups to realize their potential
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Nurse Coach
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Science of teaching that generally refers to the teaching of children and adolescents
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Pedagogy
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Affirmation of the efforts of patients
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Positive Reinforcement
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Tune into the patient, Edit patient information, Act on every teaching moment, Clarify often, Honor the patient as a partner in the education process
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TEACH acronym
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A method devised to help family members become effective problem solvers and support your teaching efforts using Creativity, Optimism, Planning and Expert information.
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COPE model
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What is my main problem, What do I need to do, Why is it important for me to do this
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Ask me 3 questions brief tool
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A tool developed to assess the level of a patient's understanding of new health information
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UPP- Understanding Personal Perception tool
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What are the three learning domains
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Cognitive, Affective, Psychomotor
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Rescue, alarm, confine, evacuate
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R.A.C.E.
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Subjective and objective data is analyzed and a plan of care is created
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S.O.A.P. Charting format
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an exaggerated response to mildly obnoxious stimuli
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Hyperalegesia
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Drug and alcohol use, age related physiological status, medical problems, Environment
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D.A.M.E fall risk
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How many hours of sleep does an Infant need
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14-20
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What medication used for sleeping disorders can cause hangover-like symptoms
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Flurazepam (Dalmane)
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What part of the brain is responsible for sleep and waking
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Hypothalamus
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The medical term for sleep walking
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Somnabulism
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An individuals sleep-wake cycle is usually fully developed at what age
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2-3 years
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What stage of sleep is it easily to arouse a person and constitutes around 50-55% of total sleep
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Stage 2 sleep
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What stage of sleep lasts only a few minutes where a person may experience involuntary muscle jerking, and are still aware of surroundings
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Stage 1 sleep
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What stage of sleep is a person hard to arouse, also known as delta sleep
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Stage 4 sleep
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What is an example of a parasomnia
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Enuresis
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What is an example of a Dyssomnia
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Restless leg syndrome, insomnia
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How many hours of sleep does a newborn usually sleep
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16-17 hours
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During what stage of sleep does the pulse, respiratory rate, blood pressure, metabolic rate, and body temperature increase, whereas general skeletal muscle tone and deep tendon reflexes are depressed.
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REM sleep
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How does Hyperthyroidism affect sleep
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It makes it difficult to fall asleep
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What type of sleep deprivation does Hypothyroidism cause, resulting in fatigue, lethargy, depression and difficulty executing tasks of everyday living
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It tends to decrease the amount of NREM sleep
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How many hours do adults need of sleep
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7-9 Hours
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Growing children need how many hours of sleep
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10-14
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The amino acid L-Tryptophan affects sleep in what way
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Promotes sleep
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What foods is the precursor to serotonin; amino acid L-Tryptophan found in
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Milk, Cheese and Turkey
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Seizures from epilepsy are more likely to occur in what type of sleep (environmental factors)
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NREM
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Seizures from epilepsy are depressed in what type of sleep (environmental factors)
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REM
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Gastric secretions increase during what type of sleep (environmental factors)
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REM
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What two diseases cause a reversal in day-night sleep patterns (environmental factors)
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Liver failure and Encephalitis
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How does Hypothyroidism affect sleep
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Decreases NREM sleep especially in stages 2 and 4
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How do Barbiturates, amphetamine and antidepressants affect sleep
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Decrease REM sleep
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How do Hypnotic-sedatives affect sleep
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Disturb both NREM and REM sleep
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The loss of high frequency, sensoineural hearing
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Presbycusis
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What is the sense of taste known as
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Gustatory
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A person who is drowsy but responds normally to stimuli is said to be
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Somnolent
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A person who can be aroused by extreme or repeated stimuli is said to be
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Stupor
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A state of optimum arousal is known as
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Sensoristasis
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Farsightedness
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Hyperopia
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Nearsidedness
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Myopia
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Lazy eye, or impaired or dim vision without any obvious defect or change in the eye, typically treated using an eyepatch, lasix surgery, corrective lenses, or administering levadopa
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Amblyopia
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Hearing loss involving the dysfunction of the nerves
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Sensorineural
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A defect in the eye or in a lens caused by a deviation from spherical curvature, which results in distorted images, as light rays are prevented from meeting at a common focus
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Astigmatism
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double vision
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Diplopia
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What vitamin is important in young children to avoid developing night blindness
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Vit A
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