SW Quizzam #4 - Chapters 10-12 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 concepts that form the base for the WHO’s concept of “active aging”?

A
  1. Participation in life (meaning the family and community)
  2. Health (meaning health promotion and activities to maintain an optimal health status)
  3. Security (including financial, community, and family security)
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2
Q

T/F: employers are allowed to discriminate against job applicants aged 40-65.

A

False, although there are ways to weasel around this (ex: reject older applicants for an “entry level” job on the grounds that they’re “overqualified”.)

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3
Q

The five stages of grief?

A
  1. Denial and isolation
  2. Anger a.k.a DABDA
  3. Bargaining
  4. Depression
  5. Acceptance
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4
Q

What are some issues that older people may face when they retire?

A

No longer being employed can lead to loss of self-concept and self-respect.
They may not be able to spend and buy things as freely as they used to.
Loss of a daily work routine means that they must discover new ways to spend their time.

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5
Q

Describe some of the issues that older people may face in regards to healthcare.

A

Medicare is not a total answer to health care for the elderly: it only pays half for a visit to a physician and nothing for long-term care, hearing aids, glasses, or dental work.
This can be troublesome since older people are more likely to have long-term illnesses and to take more time to recuperate.

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6
Q

T/F: older adults are more likely to face poverty than younger adults.

A

True. Also, nearly half of the older adults in the US would be below the poverty line if not for Social Security (which isn’t enough to make them rich).

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7
Q

What are some issues that older people may face when they retire?

A

No longer being employed can lead to loss of self-concept and self-respect.
They may not be able to spend and buy things as freely as they used to.
Loss of a daily work routine means that they must discover new ways to spend their time.

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8
Q

Helping loved ones cope with lose.

A
  1. talk about the loss. Their feelings about it.
  2. help them express their feelings
  3. help them to live without the deceased
  4. encourage them to go on
  5. provide time to grieve
  6. educate the client on customary grieving reactions
  7. be sensitive to individual styles and differences
  8. provide for continuing support (support groups)
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9
Q

Describe some of the issues that older people may face in regards to healthcare.

A

Medicare is not a total answer to health care for the elderly: it only pays half for a visit to a physician and nothing for long-term care, hearing aids, glasses, or dental work.
This can be troublesome since older people are more likely to have long-term illnesses and to take more time to recuperate.

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10
Q

What are the 5 concepts of empowerment?

A
  1. identify and face and preconceived notions and stereotypes about older people
  2. Appreciate the different life situations experienced by people from different age groups within the older adult population
  3. understand that older adults are individuals with their own experiences and personalities just like everyone else
  4. learn about how both gender and cultural background influences the aging experience
  5. understand the developmental aspect of later life, including people’s physical, mental, living, and socioeconomic conditions.
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11
Q

What are community-based services?

A
  1. Adult daycare: provides services for adults living at home who need supervision during the day
  2. Hospices: provides end-of-life care to terminally ill people
  3. Senior center: a place seniors gather for social recreational activities and educational reasons
  4. Congregate meal program: a hot meal provided for elders in a variety of community locations
  5. Senior home repair and maintenance programs: helps with upkeep around their home
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12
Q

What is long-term care?

A

The provision of health, social, and personal services over an extended period of time to people who are unable to care for themselves in some, most, or almost all ways.
The intent is promote people’s socio-emotional and physical well-being in the least restrictive way possible. Long-term care implies that recipients need either ongoing or periodic help over an extended period.

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13
Q

What are home-based services (also known as home care)?

A

Types of care provided to people in their own homes. They may involve either assistance to family members caring for an older adult relative or provision of services by formal social service agencies.

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14
Q

What is an informal support network?

A

A system of individuals who provide emotional, social, and economic support to a person in need. The family is an obvious example, but examples can also include friends, neighbors, and fellow worshipers.

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15
Q

What are formal support networks?

A

Public and private agencies and their staffs which provide services, including health care (like nursing), social services, and housekeeping help to older adults in need.

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16
Q

Um…hello????

A

Okay BYe

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17
Q

What is a consumer-centered approach?

A

Treating people as consumers means accepting that they know their own needs and can make intelligent decisions about services

18
Q

What are mobility disabilities?

A

Those whose physical differences require them [the people with the disabilities] to achieve physical activities in a variety of ways.

20
Q

What is a stroke?

A

A blockage or hemorrhage of a blood vessel leading to the brain, causing an inadequate oxygen supply and often long-term impairment of sensation, movement, or functioning. It is an acquired disability.

21
Q

What is multiple sclerosis (MS)?

A

A disease of the brain tissue in which the myelin deteriorates, thereby causing varying degrees of muscular dysfunction, paralysis, and muscle tremors.

22
Q

Describe muscular dystrophy.

A

Any of a group of hereditary disease characterized by a progressive wasting of the muscles. It is an acquired disability.

23
Q

What is myasthenia gravis (MG)?

A

A disease affecting voluntary muscles in which nerve impulses are impaired, resulting in fatigue, weakness, and difficulties controlling muscles.

23
Q

What are the five attributes of developmental disabilities?

A
  1. The disability is both severe and chronic
    * 2. The disability occurs before age 22*
  2. The conditions are likely to be permanent
  3. The disability “results in substantial functional limitations in three or more of the following areas of major life activity: (i) self-care, (ii) receptive and expressive language, (iii) learning, (iv) mobility, (v) self-direction, (vi) capacity for independent living, and (vii) economic self-sufficiency”
  4. A developmental disability demonstrates the need for lifelong supplementary help and services.

*Professor mentioned this one in particular

24
Q

Describe spinal cord injuries.

A

Damage to the spinal cord, often due to accidents or incidents of violence, resulting in the loss of muscular control and inability to experience sensation.

25
Q

Describe how treatment for developmental disabilities was treated in the 1960s?

A

These people were considered patients and when they got diagnosed they were placed in custodial care and were kept there. (did not value self-determination and empowerment)

26
Q

Describe how treatment for developmental disabilities was treated in the 1970s and 80s?

A

Principles became more important, especially for people with intellectual disabilities. Through “normalization”, deinstitutionalization, “individual program planning,” and “the developmental model”

28
Q

What is cerebral palsy?

A

A disability involving problems in muscular control and coordination resulting from damage to the brain before it has matured - that is, before or during birth. It is a developmental disability.

29
Q

What is epilepsy (also known as seizure disorder)?

A

An abrupt change in an individual’s conscious state that may involve unconsciousness, convulsive motor activity, or sensory distortions. It is a developmental disability.

29
Q

What lifestyle factors contribute to bad health?

A
  • lack of exercise
  • an unhealthful diet high in fat and cholesterol
  • cigarette smoking
  • being overweight
  • high levels of stress over long periods
30
Q

Describe orthopedic problems.

A

They are defects or disease of the muscles and bones. They are developmental disabilities.

31
Q

What is Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)?

A

A chronic condition in which a person’s immune system attacks the joints, causing pain, inflammation, stiffness, swelling, and deterioration. It is an acquired disability.

32
Q

Describe intellectual disabilities.

A

They involve a condition manifested before age 18 such that an individual scores significantly below average on standard intelligence tests and has deficits in adaptive functioning. They are developmental disabilities.

33
Q

Describe deafness/hardness of hearing.

A

Various degrees of hearing loss, causes of hearing loss, and a person’s reaction to the loss. In any case, it’s considered a developmental disability.

34
Q

Describe visual impairment.

A

Difficulty in perception compared to the norm that’s experienced through sight. It is a developmental disability.

35
Q

Describe autism spectrum disorders.

A

Conditions that share similar characteristics in the areas of social interaction, verbal or nonverbal communication, and repetitive behaviors or interests. They are developmental disabilities.

36
Q

What are five reasons that health-care costs are increasing?

A
  1. The rapid acceleration of technological advances has increased the types of services, drugs, and testing available.
  2. The population is aging.
  3. Administrative overhead for running health-care organizations is huge.
  4. The price of prescription drugs is skyrocketing.
  5. Costs of public and private health insurance continue to rise.
37
Q

What are the roles social workers have in public health departments?

A
  • help with health education and promotion
  • help address environmental issues
  • help to control communicable infections
  • organizing needed services
  • develop social resources to improve overall
38
Q

What are five reasons that health-care costs are increasing?

A
  1. The rapid acceleration of technological advances has increased the types of services, drugs, and testing available.
  2. The population is aging.
  3. Administrative overhead for running health-care organizations is huge.
  4. The price of prescription drugs is skyrocketing.
  5. Costs of public and private health insurance continue to rise.
39
Q

What are advanced directives?

A

Written, witnessed, signed instructions regarding what individuals wish to have done in the event that they are unable to make decisions.
They can either describe what should be done under certain medical circumstances or identify some other individual to make these decisions.

40
Q

What is informed consent?

A

It is the right that a patient has to receive adequate information about the consequences and risks of a medical procedure.