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1. Define important words in this chapter

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Title: 1. Define important words in this chapter


1
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • accountable
  • answerable for ones actions.
  • activities of daily living (ADLs)
  • personal daily care tasks, including bathing,
    skin, nail, and hair care, walking, eating and
    drinking, mouth care, dressing, transferring, and
    toileting.
  • acute care
  • 24-hour skilled care for short-term illnesses or
    injuries generally given in hospitals and
    ambulatory surgical centers.
  • adaptive devices
  • special equipment that helps a person who is ill
    or disabled perform ADLs also called assistive
    devices.

2
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • adult daycare
  • care given to adults at a facility during
    daytime work hours.
  • assisted living
  • a residence for people who require some help
    with daily care, but who need less care than a
    long-term care facility offers.
  • assistive devices
  • special equipment that helps a person who is ill
    or disabled perform ADLs also called adaptive
    devices.
  • care team
  • the group of people with different kinds of
    education and experience who provide resident
    care.

3
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • chain of command
  • the order of authority within a facility.
  • charge nurse (nurse-in-charge)
  • a nurse responsible for a team of healthcare
    workers.
  • chronic
  • the term for an illness or condition that is
    long-term or long-lasting.
  • cite
  • in a long-term care facility, to find a problem
    through a survey.

4
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • conscientious
  • guided by a sense of right and wrong
    principled.
  • continuity of care
  • coordination of care for a resident over time,
    during which the care team is always exchanging
    information about the resident and working toward
    shared goals.
  • courteous
  • polite, kind, considerate.
  • delegation
  • transferring authority to a person for a
    specific task.

5
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • dementia
  • a serious, progressive loss of mental abilities
    such as thinking, remembering, reasoning, and
    communicating.
  • diagnosis
  • the identification of a disease by its signs and
    symptoms and from the results of different tests.
  • empathetic
  • identifying with and understanding anothers
    feelings.
  • first impression
  • a way of classifying or categorizing people at
    the first meeting.

6
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • functional nursing
  • method of care assigning specific tasks to each
    team member.
  • holistic
  • care that involves the whole person this
    includes his or her physical, social, emotional,
    and spiritual needs.
  • home health care
  • care that takes place in a persons home.
  • hospice care
  • care for people who have approximately six
    months or less to live care is available until
    the person dies.

7
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • inter-generational care
  • mixing children and the elderly in the same care
    setting.
  • Joint Commission
  • a not-for-profit organization that evaluates and
    accredits different types of healthcare
    facilities.
  • length of stay
  • the number of days a person stays in a
    healthcare facility.
  • liability
  • a legal term that means a person can be held
    legally responsible for harming someone else.

8
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • licensed practical nurse (LPN) or licensed
    vocational nurse (LVN)
  • licensed nurse who has completed one to two
    years of education LPN/LVN administers
    medications, gives treatments, and may supervise
    daily care of residents.
  • long-term care
  • 24-hour care provided for people with ongoing
    conditions who are generally unable to manage
    their ADLs.
  • nursing assistant
  • person who performs assigned nursing tasks and
    gives personal care.
  • outpatient care
  • care usually given for less than 24 hours to
    people who have had treatments, procedures, or
    surgery.

9
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • pet therapy
  • the practice of bringing pets into a facility or
    home to provide stimulation and companionship.
  • policy
  • a course of action to be followed.
  • primary nursing
  • method of care in which the registered nurse
    gives much of the daily care to residents.
  • procedure
  • a method, or way, of doing something.

10
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • professionalism
  • the act of behaving properly for a certain job.
  • registered nurse (RN)
  • a licensed nurse who has completed two to four
    years of education RNs assess residents, create
    the care plan, monitor progress, provide skilled
    nursing care, give treatments, and supervise the
    care given by nursing assistants and other
    members of the care team.
  • rehabilitation
  • a program of care given by a specialist or a
    team of specialists to restore or improve
    function after an illness or injury.
  • resident
  • a person living in a long-term care facility.

11
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • resident-focused care
  • method of care in which the resident is the
    primary focus residents and their families
    actively participate in care, and their choices
    are honored by caregivers whenever possible.
  • sandwich generation
  • people responsible for the care of both their
    children and aging relatives.
  • skilled care
  • medically-necessary care given by a skilled
    nurse or therapist.
  • subacute care
  • care for an illness or condition given to people
    who need less care than for an acute (sudden
    onset, short-term) illness or injury but more
    than for a chronic (long-term) illness.

12
1. Define important words in this chapter
  • team leader
  • a nurse in charge of a group of residents for
    one shift of duty.
  • team nursing
  • method of care in which a nurse acts as a leader
    of a group of people giving care.
  • trustworthy
  • deserving the trust of others.

13
2. Describe healthcare settings
  • Nursing assistants have a very important job and
    many career opportunities. Your work will make a
    difference in the lives of many people.
  • Facts about long-term care (LTC)
  • Long-term care facilities provide 24-hour skilled
    care.
  • Long-term care assists people with ongoing,
    chronic medical conditions.
  • Other terms for LTC facilities include the
    following nursing homes, nursing facilities,
    skilled nursing facilities, extended care
    facilities

14
2. Describe healthcare settings
  • Define the following terms
  • long-term care
  • 24-hour care provided for people with ongoing
    conditions who are generally unable to manage
    their ADLs.
  • skilled care
  • medically-necessary care given by a skilled
    nurse or therapist.
  • chronic
  • the term for an illness or condition that is
    long-term or long-lasting.
  • resident
  • a person living in a long-term care facility.

15
2. Describe healthcare settings
  • REMEMBER
  • The LTC facility is the residents home.
  • The residents room must be treated with respect.

16
2. Describe healthcare settings
  • Think about this question
  • How would you feel if someone touched your
    personal
  • belongings or moved your things around without
    asking?

17
2. Describe healthcare settings
  • Define the following terms
  • assisted living
  • a residence for people who require some help with
    daily care, but who need less care than a
    long-term care facility offers.
  • home health care
  • care that takes place in a persons home.
  • adult daycare
  • care given to adults at a facility during daytime
    work hours.
  • sandwich generation
  • people responsible for the care of both their
    children and aging relatives.

18
2. Describe healthcare settings
  • Define the following terms
  • inter-generational care
  • mixing children and the elderly in the same care
    setting.
  • acute care
  • 24-hour skilled care for short-term illnesses or
    injuries generally given in hospitals and
    ambulatory surgical centers.
  • subacute care
  • care for an illness or condition given to people
    who need less care than for an acute (sudden
    onset, short-term) illness or injury but more
    than for a chronic (long-term) illness.
  • outpatient care
  • care usually given for less than 24 hours to
    people who have had treatments, procedures, or
    surgery.

19
2. Describe healthcare settings
  • Define the following terms
  • rehabilitation
  • a program of care given by a specialist or a team
    of specialists to restore or improve function
    after an illness or injury.
  • hospice care
  • care for people who have approximately six months
    or less to live care is available until the
    person dies.
  • pet therapy
  • the practice of bringing pets into a facility or
    home to provide stimulation and companionship.

20
3. Explain Medicare and Medicaid
  • Medicare is a health insurance program for people
  • who are 65 or older
  • who are under 65 but are disabled and cannot
    work
  • Medicare will only pay for care that it deems
    medically necessary.

21
Transparency 1-1 Facts about Medicare and
Medicaid
  • Medicare
  • Medicare is for people 65 or older and people
    under 65 who are disabled and cannot work.
  • Part A helps pay for care in a hospital or
    skilled nursing facility or for care from a home
    health agency or hospice.
  • Part B helps pay for doctor services and other
    medical services and equipment.
  • Part C allows private health insurance
    companies to provide Medicare benefits.
  • Part D helps pay for medications prescribed for
    treatment.
  • Medicaid
  • Medicaid is a medical assistance program for
    low-income people.
  • People qualify based on income and special
    circumstances.

22
4. Describe the residents for whom you will care
  • REMEMBER
  • Understanding each individual in your care is far
    more important than understanding facts about the
    entire population.

23
  • Transparency 1-2 Residents in LTC Facilities
  • Residents in LTC facilities
  • Over 88 are over 65.
  • Over 71 are female.
  • More than 85 are Caucasian.
  • About 1/3 come from a private residence.
  • Over 64 come from a hospital or other facility.

24
4. Describe the residents for whom you will care
  • Define the following terms
  • length of stay
  • the number of days a person stays in a
    healthcare facility.
  • dementia
  • a serious, progressive loss of mental abilities
    such as thinking, remembering, reasoning, and
    communicating.

25
5. Describe the nursing assistants role
  • Define the following terms
  • nursing assistant
  • person who performs assigned nursing tasks and
    gives personal care.
  • activities of daily living (ADLs)
  • personal daily care tasks, including bathing,
    skin, nail, and hair care, walking, eating and
    drinking, mouth care, dressing, transferring, and
    toileting.

26
5. Describe the nursing assistants role
  • Common nursing assistant tasks include
  • Serving trays and feeding residents
  • Helping residents dress and undress
  • Bathing, shaving, and shampooing residents
  • Bedmaking
  • Tidying living areas
  • Measuring vital signs, including temperature,
    pulse, respiration, blood pressure and observing
    and reporting pain levels

27
5. Describe the nursing assistants role
  • Common nursing assistant tasks include (contd.)
  • Helping residents with toileting
  • Assisting with mouth care
  • Giving back rubs
  • Observing and reporting changes in conditions and
    complaints
  • Helping residents move safely around facility
  • Caring for equipment

28
5. Describe the nursing assistants role
  • Tasks which nursing assistants usually do not
    perform include
  • Giving medications
  • Inserting or removing tubes
  • Giving tube feedings
  • Changing sterile dressings

29
5. Describe the nursing assistants role
  • REMEMBER
  • Nursing assistants can have different titles,
    such as nurse aide, patient care technician,
    health care assistant, etc.

30
6. Discuss professionalism and list examples of
professional behavior
  • Define the following term
  • professionalism
  • the act of behaving properly for a certain job.

31
6. Discuss professionalism and list examples of
professional behavior
  • Understanding how to be professional is a key
    step to success for a nursing assistant.
  • Professionalism has to do with behaving properly
    on the job.

32
6. Discuss professionalism and list examples of
professional behavior
  • As a nursing assistant, you must practice the
    following professional behavior
  • Be neatly dressed, groomed, and clean.
  • Do not discuss personal problems with residents.
  • Be at work on time and avoid unnecessary
    absences.
  • Never leave work early without permission.
  • Do not report to work under the influence of
    drugs and/or alcohol
  • Keep a positive attitude.
  • Do not gossip about co-workers.

33
6. Discuss professionalism and list examples of
professional behavior
  • Professional behavior for nursing assistants
    (contd.)
  • Be polite and respectful.
  • Address residents and visitors in the way they
    wish to be addressed.
  • Do not curse.
  • Keep resident information confidential.
  • Follow procedures and policies.
  • Report problems to your supervisor.
  • Maintain educational requirements.

34
6. Discuss professionalism and list examples of
professional behavior
  • Professional behavior for nursing assistants
    (contd.)
  • Ask questions when you do not understand
    something.
  • Be honest and document carefully.
  • Accept and learn from constructive criticism.
  • Do not accept tips or gifts.
  • Be loyal to your facility and be a good role
    model.

35
6. Discuss professionalism and list examples of
professional behavior
  • REMEMBER
  • Whenever you are unsure about care, be sure to
    ask questions or to review the policy manual
    about policies or procedures you do not
    understand.

36
7. List qualities that nursing assistants must
have
  • Think about these questions
  • The best nursing assistants have certain traits.
    As you review these traits, ask yourself, Do I
    have these traits? and, Is there a way I can
    better develop them?

37
7. List qualities that nursing assistants must
have
  • Define the following terms
  • trustworthy
  • deserving the trust of others.
  • conscientious
  • guided by a sense of right and wrong principled.
  • courteous
  • polite, kind, considerate.
  • empathetic
  • identifying with and understanding anothers
    feelings.

38
7. List qualities that nursing assistants must
have
  • Define the following terms
  • accountable
  • answerable for ones actions.

39
7. List qualities that nursing assistants must
have
  • Nursing assistants should be
  • Patient and understanding
  • Honest and trustworthy
  • Conscientious
  • Enthusiastic
  • Courteous and respectful

40
7. List qualities that nursing assistants must
have
  • Nursing assistant traits (contd.)
  • Empathetic
  • Dependable and responsible
  • Humble and open to growth
  • Tolerant
  • Unprejudiced

41
7. List qualities that nursing assistants must
have
  • Think about these questions
  • Choose one of the qualities that nursing
    assistants must have. Can you imagine a
    situation on the job where that quality is
    needed? Can you describe a time that you used
    that quality in a previous job, or in your
    personal life?

42
8. Discuss proper grooming guidelines
  • Making a good first impression is very important,
    and proper grooming is an essential part of
    making a good first impression.
  • Do these things to be properly groomed
  • Keep uniform clean and neat.
  • Bathe and wear deodorant every day.
  • Brush teeth at least twice a day.
  • Avoid strongly-scented items.
  • Keep hair neatly tied back.

43
8. Discuss proper grooming guidelines
  • Do these things to be properly groomed (contd.)
  • Keep beards trimmed and neat.
  • Apply makeup lightly.
  • Keep nails short, filed, and clean. Do not wear
    artificial nails.
  • Keep shoes and laces clean and in good condition.
  • Wear as little jewelry as possible, except for a
    simple waterproof watch and identification badge.

44
8. Discuss proper grooming guidelines
  • REMEMBER
  • Keep in mind that residents may be allergic to
    certain scents. Heavy perfumes or scents should
    be avoided. This is an important part of meeting
    residents needs.

45
9. Define the role of each member of the care team
  • Define the following terms
  • care team
  • the group of people with different kinds of
    education and experience who provide resident
    care.
  • registered nurse (RN)
  • a licensed nurse who has completed two to four
    years of education RNs assess residents, create
    the care plan, monitor progress, provide skilled
    nursing care, give treatments, and supervise the
    care given by nursing assistants and other
    members of the care team.

46
9. Define the role of each member of the care team
  • Define the following terms
  • diagnosis
  • the identification of a disease by its signs and
    symptoms and from the results of different tests.
  • assistive devices
  • special equipment that helps a person who is ill
    or disabled perform ADLs also called adaptive
    devices.

47
9. Define the role of each member of the care team
  • The care team consists of many members who each
    play a different role. The resident is at the
    center of the care team.
  • Members of the care team include
  • Resident and residents family
  • Nurse (RN, LPN or LVN)
  • Advanced practice nurse
  • Physician
  • Medical social worker

48
9. Define the role of each member of the care team
  • Members of the care team (contd.)
  • Physical therapist
  • Occupational therapist
  • Registered dietitian
  • Speech-language pathologist
  • Activities director
  • Nursing assistant

49
9. Define the role of each member of the care team
  • REMEMBER
  • The resident is the most important member of the
    care team.

50
10. Discuss the facility chain of command
  • Define the following terms
  • chain of command
  • the order of authority within a facility.
  • charge nurse (nurse-in-charge)
  • a nurse responsible for a team of healthcare
    workers.
  • liability
  • a legal term that means a person can be held
    legally responsible for harming someone else.

51
Transparency 1-3 Chain of Command
52
11. Explain The Five Rights of Delegation
  • Define the following term
  • delegation
  • transferring authority to a person for a specific
    task.

53
11. Explain The Five Rights of Delegation
  • When planning care, nurses must decide which
    tasks to delegate to others.
  • The Five Rights of Delegation are the
    following
  • Right Task
  • Right Circumstance
  • Right Person
  • Right Direction/Communication
  • Right Supervision/Evaluation

54
11. Explain The Five Rights of Delegation
  • Consider these questions before accepting a
    delegated task
  • Do I have all the information I need to do this
    job? Are there questions I should ask?
  • Do I believe that I can do this task? Do I have
    the necessary skills?
  • Do I have the needed supplies, equipment, and
    other support?
  • Do I know who my supervisor is, and how to reach
    him/her?
  • Have I told my supervisor of my special needs for
    help and support?
  • Do we both understand who is doing what?

55
11. Explain The Five Rights of Delegation
  • REMEMBER
  • Asking questions and asking for help when you
    need it will allow you to provide the best
    possible care.

56
11. Explain The Five Rights of Delegation
  • Think about this question
  • What could happen if you did not understand
    something you were asked to do, but did not ask
    for help?

57
12. Describe four methods of nursing care
  • Define the following term
  • holistic
  • care that involves the whole person this
    includes his or her physical, social, emotional,
    and spiritual needs.

58
12. Describe four methods of nursing care
  • The nursing profession takes a holistic approach
    to caring for residents, meaning caring for the
    whole person. This includes his or her physical
    needs as well as other needs, such as social,
    emotional, intellectual, and spiritual. Meeting
    all of these needs will improve the residents
    quality of life.

59
12. Describe four methods of nursing care
  • Over the years, the nursing profession has seen
    many changes. Many types of nursing care have
    been used at facilities. Each facility chooses
    the type that provides the best care for their
    residents. Definitions for the different types
    of nursing care follow.

60
12. Describe four methods of nursing care
  • Define the following terms
  • resident-focused care
  • method of care in which the resident is the
    primary focus residents and their families
    actively participate in care, and their choices
    are honored by caregivers whenever possible.
  • team nursing
  • method of care in which a nurse acts as a leader
    of a group of people giving care.
  • team leader
  • a nurse in charge of a group of residents for
    one shift of duty.

61
12. Describe four methods of nursing care
  • Define the following terms
  • primary nursing
  • method of care in which the registered nurse
    gives much of the daily care to residents.
  • continuity of care
  • coordination of care for a resident over time,
    during which the care team is always exchanging
    information about the resident and working toward
    shared goals.
  • functional nursing
  • method of care assigning specific tasks to each
    team member.

62
13. Explain policy and procedure manuals
  • Define the following terms
  • policy
  • a course of action to be followed.
  • procedure
  • a method, or way, of doing something.

63
13. Explain policy and procedure manuals
  • All facilities have manuals outlining policies
    and procedures. These two manuals are usually
    kept together. The procedure manual serves as a
    guide if you want to review the steps in a
    procedure.

64
13. Explain policy and procedure manuals
  • REMEMBER
  • You should always ask questions or consult the
    policy manual or procedure manual when you are
    unsure of something.

65
14. Describe the long-term care survey process
  • Define the following terms
  • cite
  • in a long-term care facility, to find a problem
    through a survey.
  • Joint Commission
  • a not-for-profit organization that evaluates and
    accredits different types of healthcare
    facilities.

66
14. Describe the long-term care survey process
  • Inspections are done by the state agency that
    licenses facilities to make sure that facilities
    are following state and federal regulations.
    These inspections are called surveys.
  • Inspections are done more often if a facility has
    been cited for problems. If the facility has a
    good record and has not been cited, inspections
    are done less often.

67
14. Describe the long-term care survey process
  • The survey process includes the following
  • Inspections are done periodically.
  • Surveyors observe and interview residents and
    staff to find out how well residents needs are
    being met.
  • Nursing assistants should answer any questions
    asked by surveyors to the best of their ability.
  • If a nursing assistant does not know the answer
    to a question, he should say so and then find
    out.

68
14. Describe the long-term care survey process
  • As previously mentioned, the Joint Commission is
    an independent, not-for-profit organization whose
    standards focus on improving the quality and
    safety of care provided. The Joint Commissions
    surveys are separate from state inspections.

69
14. Describe the long-term care survey process
  • REMEMBER
  • If a you are asked questions by surveyors during
    a survey and do not know the answer, be honest.
    Never guess. Tell the surveyor that you do not
    know the answer, but will find out as quickly as
    possible. Then check with your supervisor.

70
Exam
  • Multiple Choice. Choose the correct answer.
  • 1. Long-term care is offered in
  • (A) Hospitals
  • (B) Adult daycare facilities
  • (C) Skilled nursing facilities
  • (D) Ambulatory surgical centers
  • 2. Residents in _____ are usually more
    independent and do not need skilled care.
  • (A) Acute care facilities
  • (B) Assisted living facilities
  • (C) Subacute care facilities
  • (D) Hospice settings

71
Exam (contd.)
  • 3. Which of the following types of health care is
    generally for people who will die in six months
    or less?
  • (A) Long-term care
  • (B) Outpatient care
  • (C) Inter-generational care
  • (D) Hospice care
  • 4. _____ is a health insurance program for people
    who are 65 years of age or older or who are ill
    or disabled and cannot work.
  • (A) Medicare
  • (B) Medicaid
  • (C) CMS
  • (D) Health and Human Services

72
Exam (contd.)
  • 5. _____ is a medical assistance program for
    low-income people.
  • (A) Medicare
  • (B) Medicaid
  • (C) CMS
  • (D) HCFA
  • 6. Medicare will pay for
  • (A) All care requested by the recipient
  • (B) All care requested by the doctor
  • (C) All care requested by the facility
  • (D) Only care that it determines to be medically
    necessary

73
Exam (contd.)
  • 7. The amount that Medicare and Medicaid will pay
    long-term care facilities for services is based
    on
  • (A) The residents income
  • (B) The residents need upon admission
  • (C) The size of the facility
  • (D) Who the resident knows at the facility
  • 8. The residents with the longest average stay in
    healthcare facilities are
  • (A) Residents admitted for terminal care
  • (B) Residents admitted for rehabilitation or
    temporary illness
  • (C) Residents who are developmentally disabled
  • (D) Residents with dementia

74
Exam (contd.)
  • 9. Dementia is
  • (A) Terminal illness
  • (B) Loss of mental abilities
  • (C) The number of days a person stays in a
    healthcare facility
  • (D) Caring for the whole person
  • 10. Most people in a facility are there due to
  • (A) Lack of ability to care for themselves and
    the lack of a support system
  • (B) Depression and lack of medication
  • (C) Terminal illness
  • (D) Temporary illness

75
Exam (contd.)
  • 11. Which of the following is a task that nursing
    assistants commonly do?
  • (A) Giving medication
  • (B) Bathing residents
  • (C) Changing sterile dressings
  • (D) Giving tube feedings
  • 12. Which of the following is a task that nursing
    assistants generally do not perform?
  • (A) Shaving residents
  • (B) Inserting tubes
  • (C) Helping residents with toileting needs
  • (D) Caring for equipment

76
Exam (contd.)
  • 13. Professionalism is related to
  • (A) How a person behaves at home
  • (B) How a person behaves at work
  • (C) How well a person performs on tests
  • (D) How residents behave in a facility
  • 14. A resident has purchased a special gift for
    her nursing assistant, Sarah. Which of the
    following would be the best response by Sarah?
  • (A) Refuse but thank her for thinking of her
  • (B) Accept because Sarah does not know her
    facilitys policy on gifts
  • (C) Accept and ask the resident not to tell
    anyone
  • (D) Refuse and tell her that her employer is very
    unfair about employees accepting gifts from
    residents

77
Exam (contd.)
  • 15. One example of professional behavior by
    nursing assistants when working with residents
    is
  • (A) Keeping all resident information confidential
  • (B) Sharing funny stories about coworkers with
    the residents
  • (C) Giving gifts to favorite residents
  • (D) Asking residents for advice about personal
    problems
  • 16. Which of the following is an example of how a
    nursing assistant is demonstrating that she is
    dependable?
  • (A) The nursing assistant is never more than 10
    minutes late for work.
  • (B) The nursing assistant performs tasks that she
    does not know how to do.
  • (C) The nursing assistant avoids excessive
    absences from work.
  • (D) The nursing assistant does not ask others for
    help.

78
Exam (contd.)
  • 17. To hold oneself accountable means to
  • (A) Admit mistakes and apologize for them
  • (B) Always speak positively about the facility
  • (C) Be able to work with people of many different
    backgrounds
  • (D) Care about the problems of others
  • 18. What does the term empathetic mean?
  • (A) Empathetic means being alert around others.
  • (B) Empathetic means being able to document
    honestly.
  • (C) Empathetic means identifying with and
    understanding the feelings of others.
  • (D) Empathetic means taking responsibility for
    ones own actions.

79
Exam (contd.)
  • 19. Which of the following is a quality of the
    best nursing assistants?
  • (A) Tolerance
  • (B) Tardiness
  • (C) Complaining
  • (D) Ignoring constructive criticism
  • 20. Which of the following will help a nursing
    assistant make a good first impression at work?
  • (A) Bathing or taking a shower once a week
  • (B) Using a pleasant perfume or after-shave
  • (C) Keeping hair neatly tied back away from the
    face
  • (D) Wearing artificial nails to work

80
Exam (contd.)
  • 21. The best type of jewelry to wear to work is
  • (A) A ring
  • (B) A waterproof watch
  • (C) A bracelet
  • (D) A necklace
  • 22. The most important member of the care team
    is
  • (A) The nurse
  • (B) The nursing assistant
  • (C) The physician
  • (D) The resident

81
Exam (contd.)
  • 23. Which member of the care team assesses
    residents, monitors progress, and gives
    treatments?
  • (A) The nurse
  • (B) The nursing assistant
  • (C) The medical social worker
  • (D) The registered dietitian
  • 24. Which member of the care team has the most
    direct contact with the residents?
  • (A) The nursing assistant
  • (B) The nurse
  • (C) The physician
  • (D) The activities director

82
Exam (contd.)
  • 25. The chain of command is
  • (A) A legal term meaning a person can be held
    responsible for harming someone else
  • (B) The person in charge of the department for
    each shift
  • (C) The line of authority in a facility
  • (D) The department that a nursing assistant goes
    to if he wants to report a problem
  • 26. In which style of nursing care are residents
    and their families active participants in care
    and have their choices honored by caregivers
    whenever possible?
  • (A) Resident-focused care
  • (B) Team nursing
  • (C) Primary nursing
  • (D) Functional nursing

83
Exam (contd.)
  • 27. In which type of nursing care does the
    registered nurse give much of the overall care to
    the residents?
  • (A) Resident-focused care
  • (B) Team nursing
  • (C) Primary nursing
  • (D) Functional nursing
  • 28. What is one possible negative result of the
    functional nursing style of care?
  • (A) There are too many tasks to be completed
    effectively.
  • (B) Nursing assistants may not be adequately
    trained for their tasks.
  • (C) Staff may overlook changes in a residents
    condition.
  • (D) Residents may get tired of seeing the same
    care team members every day.

84
Exam (contd.)
  • 29. A policy is
  • (A) A course of action that should be taken every
    time a certain situation occurs
  • (B) A specific method of doing something
  • (C) The chain of command within the facility
  • (D) A reminder on how to complete a procedure
  • 30. Which of the following is the correct
    response by a nursing assistant if he forgets how
    to perform a procedure?
  • (A) Review the steps of the procedure in the
    procedure manual
  • (B) Act confident and perform the procedure
    anyway
  • (C) Check with the residents family for help
  • (D) Ask the resident for help in remembering how
    to perform the procedure

85
Exam (contd.)
  • 31. If a surveyor asks a nursing assistant a
    question, the nursing assistant should
  • (A) Answer honestly and to the best of her
    ability
  • (B) Offer suggestions for making improvements in
    the facility
  • (C) Refuse to answer any questions
  • (D) Make up an answer if she does not know it
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