Practice Questions 443
The Geneva Charter for Well-Being includes how many key actions?
5
Which is a statistical procedure that removes the effects of differences in the composition of a population when comparing one to another?
Adjusted rate
In France, which is similar in function to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration?
Agency of Health Safety of Health Products
Which type of assessment directs attention to community strengths and resources as a primary approach?
Asset-based assessment
Which public health term identifies the important concept that individuals, families, and populations have the healthcare personnel and systems needed to address their respective healthcare needs?
Assurance
Which defines the difference between the incidence rates in an exposed and an unexposed group of people?
Attributable risk
What is the leading cause of mortality in Canada?
Cancer
Which describes the relationship between two variables in which the presence or absence of one variable determines the presence or absence of the other?
Causality
Which is a group of consumers, health professionals, policy-makers, and others working together to improve community health status or to solve a specific community health problem?
Coalition
Which is an observational analytic study in which enrollment is based on status of exposure to a certain factor or membership in a certain group?
Cohort study
Which model involves public health officials working in partnership to emphasize the interdisciplinary nature of the task?
Collaborative
Which approach is based on the idea that the expertise of community dwellers is central to the task of understanding the health and well-being of the community?
Community as partner
According to standards set by the Affordable Care Act, hospitals must do which of the following in order to maintain non-profit status?
Convene a group of stakeholders every three years.
Which is the cognizance of one's own cultural values and biases?
Cultural awareness
Which is true of culture?
Culture is shared, not private.
Which is a study that collects information to identify the characteristics of individuals, groups or situations, and the frequency with which certain phenomena (risks) occur?
Descriptive
Which describes the web of causation?
Emphasizes the concept of multiple causation while de-emphasizing the role of agents in explaining illness
Which is the tendency of people to view their way of doing things and their culture as superior to the cultures and ways of others?
Ethnocentrism
A major goal of the Affordable Care Act was to shift the focus of health care toward individual, episodic care.
FALSE
A type I error is created by accepting the null hypothesis when it is false.
FALSE
A type II error is created by rejecting the null hypothesis when it is true.
FALSE
A windshield survey is a way to get an objective idea of what a community is like.
FALSE
Cultural safety is understanding that culture influences ideas about health and illness and using those ideas to promote wellness for patients.
FALSE
Culturally competent nurses should be fluent in all cultures at all times.
FALSE
Health inequities are differences in health outcomes for marginalized populations that are unavoidable.
FALSE
Health planning is best achieved when it occurs only at the local level.
FALSE
Risk factors are those characteristics or events that have been shown to decrease the probability that a specific disease or illness will develop.
FALSE
Routine descriptors of a person used in demographic data include income and education level.
FALSE
Since age adjustment and other types of adjusted rates are artificial, they cannot provide a valid way to compare two populations.
FALSE
TRICARE is an example of a privately owned health insurance company.
FALSE
The Shanghai Declaration was developed in 2000.
FALSE
The U.S. healthcare system has historically given stronger support to community rather than individual care and to prevention rather than cure.
FALSE
The characteristics of a culture usually stay the same over time.
FALSE
The independent variable is the response, behavior, or outcome presumed to be affected by the dependent variable(s).
FALSE
The epidemiologic triad is based on the belief that health status is determined by the interaction of the host, agent, and clinician.
FALSE Epidemiologic Triad = Agent, Host, and Environment
Which is a model or a road map that assists the direction toward a goal?
Framework
Which is another term used to refer to the attack rate?
Incidence rate
Which is an example of a social determinant of health?
Income
Which explains why race can be thought of as a subculture?
Individuals of the same race have shared experiences.
Which is a key theme of systems theory?
Interconnectedness
Which is another term for host factors?
Intrinsic factors
Whose analyses of the weekly reports of births and deaths in London were the precursor of modern vital statistics?
John Graunt
Who recommended the establishment of a state health department and local health boards in every town?
Lemuel Shattuck
Which refers to the departure from a state of physiologic or psychological well-being?
Morbidity
Which is an international source of healthcare information?
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
Which was created following the first international conference on health promotion?
Ottawa Charter
Which is the probability that the obtained results are not due to chance alone?
P value
Which type of change refers to seasonal or cyclic fluctuations in time surrounding health problems?
Periodic
Which refers to members of a community with common interests who have interpersonal and intrapersonal connections?
Phenomenologic community
Which of the following involves improving clinical health outcomes of a defined group of individuals within an integrated clinical health system?
Population health management
Who is the most appropriate individual to serve as language interpreter for a client?
Professional interpreter
Which is the primary measurement used to describe either the occurrence or the existence of a specific state of health or illness?
Rate
Which is a selected subset of a population?
Sample
Which refers to establishing the conditions for the health improvements achieved by an intervention to continue beyond the period of a formal community health program or for a program to continue after grant funding ends?
Sustainability
A community assessment should empower those responsible for implementing that change.
TRUE
A key informant is a person knowledgeable about specific aspects of a problem and the community's current and past attempts to address it.
TRUE
An epidemic is an increased incidence of a disease beyond that which is normally found in the population.
TRUE
An outbreak's definition is usually limited to a localized increase in the incidence of an illness.
TRUE
Association is the statistical relationship between two or more events, characteristics, or other variables.
TRUE
Community report cards provide a snapshot of the overall health and well-being of a community.
TRUE
Controls are subjects in an experiment who provide baseline data against which the effects of the treatment can be measured.
TRUE
Current data show that incidences of dental health are worsening in the United States.
TRUE
Determination of the date of onset is required for studies of incidence.
TRUE
Epidemiologic studies can focus on disease and disability, as well as states of wellness.
TRUE
Examining the illness experiences of individual people does not provide evidence of causality.
TRUE
Maternal and Child Health Services is an example of a program receiving a block grant, which gives money to specific programs and providers based on state health needs.
TRUE
Memorizing a list of cultural traits of clients is simplistic and may promote stereotyping.
TRUE
Prevalence rates measure the number of people in a given population who have a specific existing condition at a given point in time.
TRUE
Protecting the planet is a key action in the Geneva Charter for Well-Being.
TRUE
Public health nurses represent the largest group within the professional public health workforce.
TRUE
The Department of Health and Human Services has identified mental health as an area in need of special emphasis.
TRUE
The United States spends more money on health care than other high-income countries but has a shorter life expectancy and ranks lowest in performance among key health indicators.
TRUE
The educational credential for entry into public health nursing practice is the baccalaureate degree in nursing.
TRUE
The first step in any plan to help a community is to assess the community's needs.
TRUE
The group of people who live within the boundary of the geopolitical community may also be called an aggregate.
TRUE
The social ecological model is based on general systems theory.
TRUE
The term cultural competence does not capture the idea that culture and how it intersects with health is an ever-changing set of concepts, and therefore a nurse would never be done with learning about them.
TRUE
According to the Core Competencies for Public Health Nurses, in which tier do competencies apply to entry-level public health professionals at the basic or generalist level?
Tier 1
Which is an example of a biologic agent?
Toxin
Which country does NOT have a healthcare system with universal coverage?
United States