Pregunta 1
Pregunta
All health professionals are bound by the NSW health privacy manual for health info
Pregunta 2
Pregunta
Privacy is the right to be left alone or to "withhold ourselves and our lives from public scrutiny"
Pregunta 3
Pregunta
Confidentiality is the protection of personal info
Pregunta 4
Pregunta
Privacy is the protection of personal info
Pregunta 5
Pregunta
Confidentiality is the right to be left alone or to "withhold ourselves and our lives from public scrutiny"
Pregunta 6
Pregunta
Privacy is more to do with physical means and confidentiality is more to do with information
Pregunta 7
Pregunta
8 Ways to privacy and dignity NSW health
Respuesta
-
Make patients/woman and their carers welcome
-
communicate frequently with patients and carers
-
Protect patient privacy during consultation and treatment
-
respect the needs of dying patients and their carers
-
respect culture and beliefs
-
manage noise for patient/women comfort
-
avoid mixed gender accomodation
-
provide single sex bathrooms
-
maintain discomfort for patient/women
Pregunta 8
Pregunta
Select two most relevant health polices to confidentiality and privacy
Pregunta 9
Pregunta
Health records and information privacy act 2002 is an act most relevant to health privacy and confidentiality
Pregunta 10
Pregunta
Definition of personal information (privacy act) = 'info or an opinion about an identified individual or an individual who is reasonably identifiable'
Pregunta 11
Pregunta
information regarding a patient whether factual or not, or based on opinion is still part of the privacy act.
Pregunta 12
Pregunta
personal information is about personal life, work life, name, address, signature, email, phone, salary, job, title etc.
Pregunta 13
Pregunta
personal information is not about personal life, work life, name, address, signature, email, phone, salary, job, title etc.
Pregunta 14
Pregunta
Health information of a person is considered sensitive information under the privacy act.
Pregunta 15
Pregunta
Sensitive info includes info about religious beliefs or sexual orientation etc
Pregunta 16
Pregunta
The patient does not own their own health record but they have the right to access it
Pregunta 17
Pregunta
The health records and info privacy act covers the code of conduct, privacy manual and privacy info leaflet for staff
Pregunta 18
Pregunta
The health records and info privacy act provides info that staff must not intentionally disclose any info regarding a patients health
Pregunta 19
Pregunta
Once commenced employment, what do you need to sign to ensure your confidentiality and privacy?
Pregunta 20
Pregunta
Disclosures can be legally made when: select 3
Respuesta
-
Notifiable diseases
-
Court order or subpoena
-
Child abuse
-
Sex offenders
Pregunta 21
Pregunta
Disclosure in the public interest when (select 4)
Respuesta
-
serious or imminent threat
-
Threat to an identifiable third party
-
Disclosure is made to a responsible authority
-
risk of genetic disposition
-
drug or alcohol abuse
Pregunta 22
Pregunta
Disclosures must be given when in the public interest or to prevent illegal activity.
Pregunta 23
Pregunta
Clinical reasoning is the process by which nurses, midwives and other clinicians collect cues, process the info, come to an understanding of a patient problem or situation, plan and implement interventions, evaluate outcomes and reflect on and learn from the process.
Pregunta 24
Pregunta
Clinical reasoning is not a linear process but rather a series of spiral of linked and ongoing clinical encounters
Pregunta 25
Pregunta
The first part of the clinical reasoning cycle is to consider the patient situation
Pregunta 26
Pregunta
The second part of the clinical reasoning cycle is to consider the patient situation
Pregunta 27
Pregunta
The second part of the clinical reasoning cycle is to collect cues/information
Pregunta 28
Pregunta
clinical reasoning cycle - second part 'Collect cues/info - review current info, gather new info, recall knowledge ie to physio, patho, pharmacology etc.
Pregunta 29
Pregunta
Anchoring: settling on the first piece of information rather than what else we might find out
Pregunta 30
Pregunta
Ascertainment bias: thinking shaped by prior assumptions, biases, stereotypes.
Pregunta 31
Pregunta
Confirmation bias: When we look at or for data than confirms our prior assumptions rather than for something that disproves or does not confirm what we think we know.
Pregunta 32
Pregunta
Diagnostic momentum: labels, once attached, become stickier and stickier
Pregunta 33
Pregunta
Fundamental attribution error: tendency to blame people for their behaviour or health problems and exclude external factors and to do the reverse for themselves
Pregunta 34
Pregunta
Diagnostic momentum: Fundamental attribution error: tendency to blame people for their behaviour or health problems and exclude external factors and to do the reverse for themselves
Pregunta 35
Pregunta
Overconfidence bias: when we think we know more than we do about a situation which may lead to ignoring cues in favour of opinion of hunches
Pregunta 36
Pregunta
Confirmation bias: when we think we know more than we do about a situation which may lead to ignoring cues in favour of opinion of hunches
Pregunta 37
Pregunta
Premature closure: when we diagnose the problem too early and not consider reasonable alternatives
Pregunta 38
Pregunta
Psych out error: people with mental illness are vulnerable to CR error, especially when physiological causes and symptoms of serious medical conditions are missed because it was assumed are related to their pre-existing mental illness
Pregunta 39
Pregunta
Unpacking principle: poor history taking and missed cues leads to diagnostic errors
Pregunta 40
Pregunta
Ascertainment bias: Unpacking principle: poor history taking and missed cues leads to diagnostic errors