Chapter 3 Patient Assessment and Communication Flashcards
Love and belonging need:
A patient is waiting alone on a gurney in a corridor. Everyone rushes by without offering explanations or communicating.
Physiologic need:
For this imaging procedure, no food was allowed after dinner the previous evening. The examination is scheduled for 8 a.m.; however, it is now 11 a.m. and the patient is still waiting for care.
Self-esteem need:
A middle-aged patient who is having lower gastrointestinal (GI) series has an involuntary evacuation of barium on the examination table.
Self-actualization need:
A young mother is studying music in her leisure time.
Safety and security need:
A child is taken from his or her parents into the imaging department for examination. The parents are told to wait outside.
Define critical thinking and list and define the modes of thinking:
-Critical thinking is an analytical inquiry into any issue presented. The modes of thinking are as follows:
- Recall: the ability to bring to mind a large body of facts quickly.
- Habit: becoming accustomed to performing a skill without deep thought because of repetition.
- Inquiry: to process information thoughtfully and be willing and able to recognize, explore, and challenge assumptions to make sense of complex ideas; includes the ability to analyze, infer, explain, and reflect upon one’s work.
- Creativity: the ability to conceive of alternative methods of performing tasks or accomplishing a procedure that are more efficient or less traumatic. Creativity must always work within the standards of safe and ethical practice; demands accountability
An elderly woman loses her spouse of 40 years. Shortly after his death, she becomes ill and requires a surgical procedure. One might consider that her illness might be related to:
stress
The student radiographer is preparing for an anatomy examination. He or she is certain that the instructor will ask him to identify the bones of the skull. What type of answer will this question demand?
recall
Learning the profession of radiologic technology requires:
cognitive, affective, psychomotor skills
A return demonstration of an imaging examination by the radiologic technology student requires:
Psychomotor skill
A radiologic technologist who has been working in his or her profession for a number of years is assigned to perform an imaging examination that he or she has performed many times. The modes of thinking that will take precedence in this instance will be:
Habit
How a patient feels about his or her health care experience is strongly related to:
The communication skills of the health care worker caring for him
Sadie South has just been informed that she has been accepted into the radiologic technology program at Utopia University. She is very pleased about this, but she begins to worry about her ability to succeed in the program. She is concerned about her manner of speaking, her ability to help others, and her appearance. One might say that Ms. South has:
Low self-esteem
List the requirements of the problem-solving process.
- Data collection
- Data Analysis
- Planning
- Implementation
- Evaluation
Mr. Ritch enters the imaging department for an examination. He informs the radiographer that he is having severe back pain and is short of breath. This data would be listed as:
Objective data