HOVFEL20020 Eksamensspørsmål Flashcards
Professional capital can be defined as the aggregated value of mandated educational qualifications, social ‘distinction’ based in a territory of social practice, and economic worth marked by the artefacts of professional status, occupational closure and protection of title.
Right
Factors such as gender, age, culture and level of education can directly impact the perceived level of collaboration.
Right
The consequences of narrow patient and public involvement selection processes is that those with most to gain (such as minority ethnic groups) are most included in healthcare decision-making.
Wrong
These factors are known as barriers to collaboration: Patriarchal relationships, time, gender, culture and lack of role clarification
Right
There can be positive outcomes for patients and providers when collaboration takes place and goals are attained.
Right
Developing stronger patient and public involvement in the organisation and delivery of healthcare is not central to health reforms across Western countries.
Wrong
Organisations may lack clarity about what the issues are regarding involving patients and their family members, they can be unsure who to involve and the goals of involvement.
Right
Evidence suggests that patients can be involved and contribute to healthcare in ways such as helping to reach an accurate diagnosis, choosing an appropriate treatment and identifying adverse events and side effects
Right
It is through interdisciplinary collaboration and patient communication that goals for client’s health outcomes are developed and implemented.
Right
Issues to do with inequality, discrimination and social exclusion do not play a role in preventing individuals participating in the involvement process.
Wrong
Power imbalance never manifest in who is getting involved in committees or projects.
Wrong
Patient representatives are often drawn from black and minority ethnic groups.
Wrong
Central goals of involvement should focus on issues of representation, equalities, non-discrimination and empowerment.
Right
Patient’s informed preferences is not important in preventing misdiagnosis and unwanted interventions.
Wrong
Empowering users and supporting frontline staff to feel confident in sharing power and accepting user expertise is irrelevant in developing more shared and collaborative ways of working.
Wrong
Social work traverses the impact of social, cultural, and economic conditions on health; the impact of illness on personal and family coping; the need for social support; and the importance of multi-professional collaboration on individual and community health problems.
Right
Professional identity, as one form of social identity, concerns group interactions in the workplace and relates to how people compare and differentiate themselves from other professional groups.
Right
Social work has a historical tradition of regarding any threats to health and well-being as being much more than disease and social workers can work in primary care to attack the links between health and social inequalities.
Right
The world health organization (WHO) states that Interprofessional Education occurs when “students from one profession learn about effective collaboration and improve health outcomes”.
Wrong
In healthcare teams who fail to collaborate, patients have increased mortality and failure-to -rescue
Right
Interprofessional Education is irrelevant to building a collaborative practice environment
Wrong
Social workers provide an integral role in health care, including seeking effective care and well-being for patients and families.
Right
Implementation of welfare technology is seldom met by different kinds of resistance.
Wrong
Resistance to the implementation of welfare technology can be categorized as the following: Organizational resistance, Cultural resistance, Technological resistance and Ethical resistance.
Right
The WHO defines eHealth as the use of information and communication technologies (ICT) for health
Right
Service user involvement aims to improve the health and service experience for service users and their families, as well as for the wider public.
Right
The main purpose of involvement of patients and service users in decision-making is to reduce the service providers’ professional responsibility for health and social care outcomes.
Wrong
Using the web and smartphone/tablet applications for health services and information, people with diabetes, for example, can better control self-care activities supporting health behaviour change.
Right
Motivational barriers to sharing data include those that prevent individuals or organizations from readily sharing data. Specifically, these barriers include the lack of incentives, opportunity costs, fear of criticisms and disagreement on data use and access.
Right
Inaccessibility to digital services can exclude a person from society, also causing a digital divide, and make them second-class citizens in a digitalised society.
Right
There are various barriers to the use of digital health care and social welfare services in prisons, and prisoners often do not have direct access to these digital services during their imprisonment.
Right
Given that the quality of relationships is critical in recovery-oriented practice, greater focus on human support in Internet-based interventions is needed in future research and practice.
Right