Essentials for Nursing Practice, 8th Edition by Patricia A. Potter, Anne Griffin Perry, Patricia Stockert, Amy Hall
Essentials for Nursing Practice, 8th Edition by Patricia A. Potter, Anne Griffin Perry, Patricia Stockert, Amy Hall
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Chapter 20: Cultural Awareness
Complete Chapter Questions With Answers
Sample Questions Are Posted Below
MULTIPLE CHOICE
| a. | Repeat the instructions until the patient understands. |
| b. | Present the information and clarify with closed-ended questions. |
| c. | Ask the patient if he understands the instructions. |
| d. | Ask if the patient has any questions about the technique. |
ANS: A
The “teach back” technique is an ongoing process of asking patients for feedback, through explanation or demonstration, and presenting information in a new way until you feel confident that you communicated clearly and patients have a full understanding of the information presented. Using teach back can also help you identify explanations and communication strategies that patients most commonly understand. When using the “teach back” technique, do not ask the patient, “Do you understand? or “Do you have any questions?” Instead you should ask open-ended questions to verify the patient’s understanding.
PTS: 1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application)
REF: 539
OBJ: Analyze the impact of culture on health, illness, and caring patterns.
TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity
| a. | What people of Mexican descent believe |
| b. | The relationship between culture and ethnicity |
| c. | The fact that the patient belongs to an isolated social group |
| d. | Where the person is in the intersections of socially constructed categories |
ANS: D
We must understand a person’s location in the intersections of socially constructed categories of privilege and oppression (e.g., race, class, gender, age, sexual orientation). This is necessary in order to, “fully understand a person’s actions, choices and outcomes.” Culture has historically been associated with norms, values, and traditions passed down through generations. Culture has also been perceived as synonymous with ethnicity, race, nationality, and language. These outdated ideas about culture lead to statements such as, “Mexicans believe this” or “Chinese patients are like this.” In reality, culture is much more dynamic and includes race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, class, immigration status, and other axes of identification. All of us are members of multiple social groups at the same time. These intersecting identities impact our experience of the world around us.
PTS: 1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Applying (Application)
REF: 532 OBJ: Describe steps toward developing cultural competence.
TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity
| a. | Maintaining advantages based on social group membership |
| b. | Systems that maintain disadvantages aimed purely at individuals |
| c. | Intentional discrepancies alone |
| d. | Issues at institutional levels independent of individual or cultural factors |
ANS: A
Oppression involves systems that maintain advantages and disadvantages based on social group membership and operate intentionally and unintentionally, at individual, cultural, and institutional levels.
PTS: 1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension)
REF: 532 OBJ: Use cultural assessment to plan culturally competent care.
TOP: Nursing Process: Planning MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity
| a. | Understanding that cultural patterns are generated from predetermined criteria |
| b. | Knowing that culturally congruent care is based on health care system values |
| c. | Understanding cultural similarities and differences among groups of people |
| d. | The realization that illness and disease are the same |
ANS: C
Leininger defines transcultural nursing as a comparative study of cultures to understand similarities (culture universal) and differences (culture-specific) across human groups. The goal of transcultural nursing is culturally congruent care, or care that fits a person’s life patterns, values, and a set of meanings. Patterns and meanings are generated from people themselves rather than predetermined criteria. Culturally congruent care is sometimes different from the values and meanings of the professional health care system. To provide culturally congruent care, it is important for you to distinguish between disease and illness. Illness is the way that individuals and families react to disease, whereas disease is a malfunctioning of biological or psychological processes.
PTS: 1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding (Comprehension)
REF: 533 | 534
OBJ: Describe social and cultural influences in health, illness, and caring patterns.
TOP: Nursing Process: Planning MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity
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$30.00 Original price was: $30.00.$20.00Current price is: $20.00.
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