Week 1 - 4 NURS1101

Descripción

privacy and confidentiality Week 1 - 4 NURS1101
Jessica Bulley
Test por Jessica Bulley, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Jessica Bulley
Creado por Jessica Bulley hace más de 5 años
11
0

Resumen del Recurso

Pregunta 1

Pregunta
All health professionals are bound by the NSW health privacy manual for health info
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 2

Pregunta
Privacy is the right to be left alone or to "withhold ourselves and our lives from public scrutiny"
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 3

Pregunta
Confidentiality is the protection of personal info
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 4

Pregunta
Privacy is the protection of personal info
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 5

Pregunta
Confidentiality is the right to be left alone or to "withhold ourselves and our lives from public scrutiny"
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 6

Pregunta
Privacy is more to do with physical means and confidentiality is more to do with information
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

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
Respuesta
  • Privacy act 2001
  • Health records and information privacy act 2002
  • Privacy act 1988

Pregunta 9

Pregunta
Health records and information privacy act 2002 is an act most relevant to health privacy and confidentiality
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 10

Pregunta
Definition of personal information (privacy act) = 'info or an opinion about an identified individual or an individual who is reasonably identifiable'
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 11

Pregunta
information regarding a patient whether factual or not, or based on opinion is still part of the privacy act.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 12

Pregunta
personal information is about personal life, work life, name, address, signature, email, phone, salary, job, title etc.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 13

Pregunta
personal information is not about personal life, work life, name, address, signature, email, phone, salary, job, title etc.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 14

Pregunta
Health information of a person is considered sensitive information under the privacy act.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 15

Pregunta
Sensitive info includes info about religious beliefs or sexual orientation etc
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 16

Pregunta
The patient does not own their own health record but they have the right to access it
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 17

Pregunta
The health records and info privacy act covers the code of conduct, privacy manual and privacy info leaflet for staff
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 18

Pregunta
The health records and info privacy act provides info that staff must not intentionally disclose any info regarding a patients health
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 19

Pregunta
Once commenced employment, what do you need to sign to ensure your confidentiality and privacy?
Respuesta
  • NSW Health code of Conduct
  • NSW Health code of Confidentiality

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.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

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.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 24

Pregunta
Clinical reasoning is not a linear process but rather a series of spiral of linked and ongoing clinical encounters
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 25

Pregunta
The first part of the clinical reasoning cycle is to consider the patient situation
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 26

Pregunta
The second part of the clinical reasoning cycle is to consider the patient situation
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 27

Pregunta
The second part of the clinical reasoning cycle is to collect cues/information
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

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.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 29

Pregunta
Anchoring: settling on the first piece of information rather than what else we might find out
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 30

Pregunta
Ascertainment bias: thinking shaped by prior assumptions, biases, stereotypes.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

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.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 32

Pregunta
Diagnostic momentum: labels, once attached, become stickier and stickier
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

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
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

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
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

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
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

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
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 37

Pregunta
Premature closure: when we diagnose the problem too early and not consider reasonable alternatives
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

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
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 39

Pregunta
Unpacking principle: poor history taking and missed cues leads to diagnostic errors
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 40

Pregunta
Ascertainment bias: Unpacking principle: poor history taking and missed cues leads to diagnostic errors
Respuesta
  • True
  • False
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