Module 2: Basic Human Needs Flashcards
Neurological and developmental disorder that affects how people interact with others, communicate, learn, and behave.
Autism
An acceptance that a statement is true or that something exists.
Belief
An affinity for a place or situation.
Belonging
A group of disorders that affect a person’s ability to move and maintain balance and posture.
Cerebral Palsy
People ordained for religious duties, especially in the Christian Church.
Clergy
The customs, arts, social institutions, and achievements of a particular nation, people, or other social group.
Culture
The belief that all people hold a special value that’s tied solely to their humanity.
Dignity
The quality or fact of belonging to a population group or subgroup made up of people who share a common cultural background or descent.
Ethnicity
Any condition of the body or mind (impairment) that makes it more difficult for a person to do certain activities and interact with the world around them.
Disabled
Involving people from a range of different social and ethnic backgrounds and of different genders, sexual orientations, etc.
Diversity
Genetic disorder caused when abnormal cell division results in an extra full or partial copy of chromosome 21.
Down Syndrome
- Complete trust or confidence in someone or something.
- Strong belief in God or in the doctrines of a religion, based on spiritual apprehension rather than proof.
Faith
The male sex or the female sex.
Gender
A person’s innate sense of male or female characteristics.
Gender Identity
A set of pronouns that an individual uses to reflect that person’s own gender identity.
Gender Pronouns
Care of patients that is based on a mutual understanding of their physical, psychological, emotional, and spiritual dimensions.
Holistic Care
Term used when there are limits to a person’s ability to learn at an expected level and function in daily life.
Intellectual Disability
A model as a highly-influential way of organizing human needs from the most “basic” to the most advanced.
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
The most basic physiological needs.
Physical
Any combination of mental health, emotional, spiritual or behavioral needs, concerns or aspects of the resident’s life which are identified as important to the resident.
Psychosocial
A social construct used to group people based on physical characteristics, behavioral patterns, and geographic location.
Race
The belief in and worship of a superhuman power or powers, especially a God or gods
Religion
The condition of being protected from an unlikely of cause danger, risk, or injury.
Safety
The state of being free from danger or threat.
Security
When an individual has not been to accomplish the basic needs of physical and mental care.
Self-care Deficit
Confidence in one’s own worth or abilities; self-respect.
Self-esteem
Determination of whether a person is male or female.
Sex
A person’s identity in relation to the gender or genders to which they are sexually attracted.
Sexual Orientation
Relating to or affecting the human spirit or soul as opposed to material or physical things
Spiritual
A person’s principles or standards of behavior; one’s judgment of what is important in life.
Values
Belonging to a population group of people who share a common cultural background or descent.
Ethnicity
Socially constructed roles, behaviors, expressions and identities of girls, women, boys, men, and gender diverse people.
Gender
A person’s inner sense of being a girl/woman, boy/man, some combination of both, or something else, including having no gender at all.
Gender Indentity
Pronouns that people ask others to use in reference to themselves.
Gender Pronouns
A biological description based on reproductive, hormonal, anatomical, and genetic characteristics.
Sex