Chapter 14: Values and Beliefs

Basic Geriatric Nursing 5th Edition by Gloria Hoffman Wold

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Chapter 14: Values and Beliefs

 

Complete Chapter Questions With Answers

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

MULTIPLE CHOICE

 

  1. It is believed that a person’s value system is well established by age:
a. 5.
b. 8.
c. 10.
d. 12.

 

ANS:   C

The value system, developed in early childhood, is well established by the age of 10 years.

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Knowledge REF:    234      OBJ:    1

TOP:    Value System                          KEY:   Nursing Process Step: N/A

MSC:   NCLEX: N/A

 

  1. The culturally sensitive nurse is aware that in caring for a patient with a different value system, the nurse should:
a. be open and nonjudgmental.
b. treat all patients the same without concern for their value system.
c. explain the differences between the two value systems.
d. abandon their own value system.

 

ANS:   A

Persons are prone to view those with a different value system from their own in a negative and prejudicial manner.

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Comprehension       REF:    236      OBJ:    1

TOP:    Value Systems Differences    KEY:   Nursing Process Step: Planning

MSC:   NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity: Psychosocial Adaptation

 

  1. When the 80-year-old Orthodox Jewish man dies in the hospital, the nurse should:
a. notify the rabbi to send a member of the synagogue to stay with the body.
b. inform the mortuary about the desire of the patient to be cremated.
c. prepare the body for the ritual bath by temple members before embalming.
d. facilitate removal of the body because the burial must take place 48 hours after death.

 

ANS:   A

A synagogue member will come to pray and read scripture from the time of death to the time of burial, which must take place 24 hours after death. The reader will accompany the body to the morgue, mortuary, and burial site. Jewish persons are forbidden to be cremated or embalmed.

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Analysis      REF:    235, Cultural Considerations

OBJ:    5          TOP:    Jewish Culture

KEY:   Nursing Process Step: Implementation

MSC:   NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity: Psychosocial Adaptation

 

  1. The nurse is careful not to remove the yarmulke from the head of the Jewish man during care because it is a symbol of:
a. having been circumcised.
b. the belief that God is higher than man.
c. God’s endless love and protection.
d. the justice of Talmudic law.

 

ANS:   B

The yarmulke is worn by Jewish men to remind them that God is higher than man.

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Application REF:    235, Cultural Considerations

OBJ:    4          TOP:    Jewish Culture

KEY:   Nursing Process Step: Planning

MSC:   NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity: Psychosocial Adaptation

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