Mobility in Context 2nd Edition Johansson Test Bank
Test Bank for Mobility in Context Principles of Patient Care Skills 2nd Edition By Charity Johansson, Susan A. Chinworth, ISBN-13: 9780803658172
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Establishing the Bar: An Introduction
The Fundamentals of Progressive Mobility
I. Moving the Bar: Preparing Yourself for Patient-Clinician Interaction
1. Establishing the Therapeutic Alliance
2. The Mechanics of Movement
3. Special Environments
II. Moving the Bar: Initiating Mobility
4. Keeping It Clean: Maintaining Cleanliness in the Clinical Environment
5. Assessing Physiological Status: Vital Signs
6. Draping for Minimum Exposure and Maximum Dignity
7. Positioning Your Patient for Mobility
8. Transferring Dependent Patients: Safe Patient Handling and Mobility
III. Moving the Bar: Engaging the Patient in Early Functional Mobility
9. Maintaining Capacity for Mobility Through Range of Motion
10. Bed Mobility
11. Manual Lateral Transfers: Seated and Pivot
12. Vertical Transfers: Floor to Chair and Chair to Plinth
IV. Moving the Bar: Locomotion
13. Seated Mobility: Sitting But Not Sitting Still–Fitting and Propelling a Wheelchair
14. Navigating the Challenges of Ambulating
15. Implementing Device-Specific Gait
Chapter 1: Establishing the Therapeutic Alliance
Multiple Choice
1. Which of the following statements is true about interactions with patients?
A. Our attitudes are expressed at a conscious level as well as an unconscious level.
B. Our past experiences have little to do with our present therapeutic relationships.
C. Our past experiences shape our attitudes toward our patients, but not our beliefs.
D. Unchallenged assumptions about our patients generally are favorable.
ANS: A
Rationale: When interacting with patients, physical therapists must be aware that their attitudes are expressed at a conscious level as well as an unconscious level. Our experiences have a great deal to do with how we interact with patients and shape our attitudes and beliefs. Unchallenged assumptions can create negative interactions with our patients.
2. Based on common biases in the U.S. healthcare community, which of the following patients is likely to be at greatest risk for experiencing negative bias?
A. A 10-year-old boy with chickenpox
B. A 28-year-old obese Mexican woman with chest pain
C. A 43-year-old female athlete with a fractured leg
D. A 72-year-old Caucasian man with osteoarthritis of the knee
ANS: B
Rationale: Although the 72-year-old man may experience age bias, the 28-year-old obese Mexican woman with chest pain may be subject to bias based on obesity, nationality, and gender, as well as on symptoms that are not as well recognized in a young person or in a female.
3. Which of the following has been described as “the last acceptable form of prejudice”?
A. HIV/AIDS bias
B. Mental illness bias
C. Obesity bias
D. Substance abuse bias
ANS: C
Rationale: Obesity bias cuts across social groups and is commonly compounded by other prejudices.