SAS#1 Flashcards

(40 cards)

1
Q

Philosophy of Maternal and
Child Health Nursing

❖ Includes the following concepts:

A

o Family-centered
o Community-centered
o Evidence-based

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2
Q

Global Health Goals are

A

MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENTAL GOALS

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS

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3
Q

Millenium development goals - these eight goals set by the united nations back in 2000 to eradicate

A

POVERTY
HUNGER
ILLITERACY
DISEASE

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4
Q

The united nations and the world health organization established _______to improve health worldwide

A

MILLENNIUM HEALTH GOALS

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5
Q

Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)

A

Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger.

Achieve universal primary education.

Promote gender equality and empower women.

Reduce child mortality.

Improve maternal health.

Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases.

Ensure environmental sustainability.

Global partnership for development.

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6
Q

It aims to transform our world and to improve
people’s lives and prosperity on a healthy planet.

A

Sustainable Development Goals

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7
Q

Are a collection of 17 global goals set by the united nations general assembly in 2015 for the year 2030

A

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS

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8
Q

Phases of health care

A

o Health promotion
o Health maintenance
o Health restoration
o Health rehabilitation

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9
Q

The steps of the nursing process

A

o Assessment
o Nursing diagnosis
o Planning
o Implementation
o Evaluation

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10
Q

nursing theories that are related in promoting healthy pregnancies and keeping the children well are designed to offer helpful ways to view patient so nursing activities can be created to best meet patient needs

A

CALLISTA ROY’S ADAPTATION THEORY
DOROTHEA OREM’S SELF CARE THEORY
PATRICIA BENNER’S NOVICE EXPERT MODEL

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11
Q

Nurse role is to help patients adapt to change caused by illnesses or other stressors

A

CALLISTA ROY’S ADAPTATION THEORY

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12
Q

Involves examining the patient’s ability for self care

A

DOROTHEA OREM’S SELF CARE THEORY

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13
Q

Describes nurses move from novice to expert

A

PATRICIA BENNER’S NOVICE EXPERT MODEL

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14
Q

It is states that the nursing practice is a holistic approach, the ideal functions of being a nurse, collaborator of care provider of healthcare education nurse educator and finding more evidence-based practice by being a nurse researcher.

A

PHILIPPINE NURSING ACT OF 2002 (REPUBLIC ACT 9173) ARTICLE 6

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15
Q

Competencies necessary for quality care: or Quality & Safety Education for Nurses
(QSEN)

A

❖ Patient-Centered Care
❖ Teamwork & Collaboration
❖ Evidence-Based Practice
❖ Quality Improvement
❖ Safety
❖ Informatics

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16
Q

Alternative Healthcare Practices
Commonly Used

A

❖ Acupuncture
❖ Homeopathy
❖ Therapeutic touch
❖ Chiropractic care
❖ Herbalism

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17
Q

A group of people related by blood marriage or adoption living together

18
Q

Two or more people who live in the same household share a common emotional bond and perform certain interrelated social tasks

19
Q

Basic Family Types

A

Family of orientation
Family of procreation

20
Q

refers to the family in which a person is RAISED

A

Family of orientation

21
Q

the family that we CREATE by getting married and
having children

A

Family of procreation

22
Q

Two people living together without children

Advantages: Companionship and shared resources

A

CHILDFREE OR CHILDLESS FAMILY

23
Q

Couples perhaps
with children
who live
together but
remain
unmarried.

A

Cohabitation Family

24
Q

❖ Composed of
2 parents and
children.

❖ Advantage:
financial and
emotional
support,
genuine
affection for
each other.

A

Nuclear Family

25
❖ A family that is created by divorce or separation when the child is raised in two families.
Binuclear family
26
❖ Nuclear family plus grandparents, uncles, aunties, cousins and grandchildren. ❖ Contains more people to serve as resources during crises and models for behavior and values.
Extended (Multigenerational) Family
27
Single-Mother Family-typically designed for a financially stable women who desires family.
Single Parent Family
28
❖ Remarriage or reconstituted family ❖ A divorced or widowed person with children marries someone who also have children.
Blended Family
29
Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender couples live together as partners for companionship, financial security and sexual fulfillment.
LGBT Family
30
❖ Foster or substitute home by a child protection agency(DSWD) ❖ Children whose parents can no longer care for them maybe placed with foster family.
Foster Family
31
No matter what the family size adoptive family that can provide care and financial stability to an adopted child.
Adoptive Family
32
marriage with multiple spouses
Polygamous Family
33
(1 man with several wives)
polygyny
34
(1 woman with several husbands)
polyandry
35
Group of people who choose to live together as an extended family Motivated by social or religious values rather than kinship Freedom and features rather than those of a traditional family Prefer complementary or alternative therapies
COMMUNAL FAMILY
36
Family Life Cycles
BOOMERANG GENERATION SANDWICH FAMILY EMPTY NEST SYNDROME
37
young adults return home to live with their family after college or a failed relationship until they can afford their own apartment or form a new relationship.
BOOMERANG GENERATION
38
a family that is squeezed into taking care of both aging parents and a returning young adult.
❖ SANDWICH FAMILY
39
is a feeling of boredom or grief and loneliness parents may feel when their children leave home for the first time, such as to live on their own or to form families of their own
EMPTY NEST SYNDROME
40
diagram that details family structure, provides info about the family’s history and the roles of various family members over time, usually through several generations; provides a basis for discussion and analysis of family interaction.
GENOGRAM