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NR 599 Final question/nursing-informatics-final-exam- flash-cards, Exams of Nursing

NR 599 Final question/nursing-informatics-final-exam- flash-cards

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2021/2022

Available from 04/23/2022

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Download NR 599 Final question/nursing-informatics-final-exam- flash-cards and more Exams Nursing in PDF only on Docsity! 1 NR 599 Final question/nursing- informatics- final-exam-flash- cards 16 pag. NR 599 Final question/nursing-informatics-final-exam- flash-cards Case Western Reserve University Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing NURS 120: Introduction to Nursing Informatics Final Examination Fall Directions: This is a comprehensive final examination covering material from lectures, readings, web sites handouts and class notes. It is open-book, open-note. You may work in groups if you wish. The only rule, everyone's name must be on the exam. Answer all questions directly on the examination. There are no trick questions. Every multiple-choice question has ONLY one correct answer. This examination is worth 250 points. Each multiple choice/true-false question is worth 3.5 points. The single essay question is worth 5 points. Part I: Multiple Choice Questions 1. Why is it difficult to integrate information from all hospital departments into a single hospital information system? a. Individual departments want to obtain & maintain specialized systems b. Hospital departments are organized along vertical lines while the continuum of care for patients flows along horizontal lines c. Patient care systems & financial management systems are incompatible with each other d. Each department is required by law & the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals & Health Care Organizations to maintain specific information for billing & 2 accreditation purposes e. Individual departments do not see the value in comprehensive patient records 2. Which of the following groups of activities represent challenges to the technologist when building an integrated hospital information system? a. Synthesizing different types of information into a cohesive whole, getting all departments to agree to a single billing procedure, realigning traditional departments into a case management model b. Synthesizing different types of information into a cohesive whole, getting all departments to agree to a single care model, realigning traditional departments into a case management model c. Allowing specific departments to retain their individualized information systems, getting all departments to agree to a single billing procedure, realigning traditional departments into a case management model d. Synthesizing different types of information into a cohesive whole, getting all departments to agree to a single billing procedure, keeping all hospital departments within the traditional vertical structure e. Allowing all departments to retain their individual information systems, allowing all departments to have their own billing system, keeping all hospital departments separate but equal 3. The conceptual components of informatics are: a. Management, processing, & transformation b. Data, information, & paradigms c. Data, information, & knowledge d. Management, processing, & data e. Management, processing, & knowledge 4. Several colleges have suggested that Wikipedia™ be banned as a resource for academic papers. Which of the following statements support that ban? a. Wikipedia™ cannot be considered a primary source of information b. Wikipedia™ cannot be considered an authoritative source of information c. Wikipedia™ is sometimes unreliable d. Wikipedia™ allows almost anyone to edit most of its articles e. All of the above 5. When would you use the word “and” in a literature search? a. When you want to eliminate citations with a certain term in the title b. When only one of multiple search terms must be in the title of the citation c. When all of multiple search terms must be in the title of the citation d. When you want to index a particular article e. When you want the abstract of the citations to be included in the literature search 5 12. Which of the following statements is a definition of Nursing Informatics? a. Collected information technologies concerned with medical patient care & decision making b. Use of information technology management concepts & methods to support the delivery of patient care c. Complex processing of data by a computer to produce new kinds of information d. Any use of information technology by nurses in relation to the care of patients, administration of health care facilities, & educational preparation of individuals to practice nursing e. Combination of computer science, information science, & nursing science designed to assist in the management & processing of nursing data 13. The functional components of informatics are: a. Data, information, & knowledge b. Management, processing, & transformation c. Management, processing, & information d. Processing, transformation & knowledge e. None of the above 14. The role of the Informatics Nurse Specialist (INS) encompasses multiple activities ranging from the development of Informatics theory to the ongoing maintenance & provision of enhancements to information systems. Which of the following statements describes the education, experience, & user groups that concern an INS? a. Formal education & practical experience in using computers; supports the automation needs of critical care nurses b. Formal education & practical experience in using computers; supports the automation needs of maternal-child nurses c. Formal education & practical experience in using computers; supports the automation needs of community health nurses d. Formal education & practical experience in using computers; supports the automation needs of all e. Formal education & practical experience in using computers; supports the automation needs of psychiatric nurses 15. Security can be defined as: a. The right of individuals to determine at what time, in what way, & to what extent information about them is communicated to others b. Physical protection of information from unauthorized access, modification, & destruction c. An expectation that information collected will be used for the purpose for which it was gathered d. Organizational beliefs about who generates, stores, retrieves & uses information e. The belief that the existence, purpose, & type of records in system shall be public knowledge 4 6 16. Beliefs about who generates, stores, retrieves, & uses information within an organization are known as the organizations: a. Mission for information use b. Philosophy of information use c. Vision of information use d. Framework for information technology development and implementation e. Legal-ethical responsibilities for information use and storage 7 17. Privacy can be defined as: a. An expectation that information collected will be used for the purpose for which it was gathered b. The right of individuals to determine at what time, in what way, & to what extent information about them is communicated to others c. Protection of information from unauthorized access, modification, & destruction d. Organizational beliefs about who generates, stores, retrieves & uses information e. All of the above 18. Confidentiality can be defined as: a. Organizational beliefs about who generates, stores, retrieves & uses information b. Physical protection of information from unauthorized access, modification, & destruction c. An expectation that information collected will be used for the purpose for which it was gathered d. The right of individuals to determine at what time, in what way, & to what extent information about them is communicated to others e. The belief that the existence, purpose, & type of records in system shall be public knowledge 19. As a nurse practitioner, you are questioned by a patient about the usefulness of a particular web site for health information. You do not know the web site and have no computer available to access the site in your office. Which of the following replies would be the most appropriate to make to your patient? a. “If the site showed up on your search engine- it must be good. Go ahead and use it!” b. “I don’t really know the site, but here are some things to look for. You can also go to the Health on the Net Foundation and check it out” c. “Have any of your friends used it? What did they think?” d. “No Internet sites have any useful information. Let me give you some written information instead.” e. “What does your doctor think about the site?” 20. Why are nurses’ natural advocates of consumer health applications? a. With the nursing shortage, it lightens the workload b. Nurses are more computer literate than physicians c. Nurses have always taken a leadership role in patient education d. Only nurses are exposed to consumer informatics in school e. It’s easier to get patients to teach themselves than it is to spend the time and teach them 6 10 a. A computer mapping & analysis system that allows large quantities of information to be viewed & analyzed within a geographic context b. A system which allows researchers to study the distribution of disease in a neighborhood c. System which allows the community health nurse to locate a patient’s home without using a map (a Global Positioning System) d. A system which allows research about infant mortality in a particular census tract e. All of the above 27. Which of the following are limitations of Geographic Information Systems? a. Costs are often prohibitive b. Software packages are difficult to learn c. Data from government databases may not be compatible with the GIS being used for research d. None of the above e. All of the above 28. Which of the following statements justifies the need for and use of standardized nursing languages? a. They provide a legal record of patient care b. They support clinical decision making c. They help accumulate information to expand nursing science d. They help exchange data with internal and external systems for research e. All of the above 29. Which of the following are characteristics of a POC (point-of-care) information system? a. Supports care delivery processes b. Device for input & output of information is at the point of care c. POC system is interfaced or integrated with other hospital systems d. All of the above e. None of the above 30. Which of the following statements reflect goals that health care facilities might consider when moving to a POC system? a. Collect data at the source & present it where & when it is needed b. Minimize documentation time & eliminate redundancies & inaccuracies in charting c. Improve timeliness of documentation d. Optimize information access e. All of the above 31. Which of the following pairs of items are examples of quantitative benefits of point of care (POC) systems? a. Cost avoidance & revenue increases b. Improved process & improved patient outcomes c. Improved patient data & direct savings 9 11 d. Improved patient outcomes & direct savings e. Potential savings & improved patient satisfaction 32. Which of the following pairs of items are examples of qualitative benefits of point of care (POC) systems? a. Improved process & improved patient outcomes b. Cost avoidance & potential savings c. Improved process & cost avoidance d. Improved patient outcomes & improved patient data e. Revenue increases & improved patient data 33. To be able to effectively implement a point-of care system, you need all of the following except: a. Clear goals & objectives b. A prototype system as a model c. Integration with other departments within the institution d. A team approach to system development 34. In moving a Hospital towards a POC system, multiple problems may emerge. Which of the statements listed below best describes a problem that may impact the entire institution? a. Software is not clinician friendly b. Some desired features may not be available in the chosen system c. Full sized terminals at the bedside may cause space and ergonomic (human factors) problems d. Existing computer system infrastructure may not be able to handle the additional workload of the new computers 35. Which of the following groups of items best represent the characteristics of a point of care system? a. Support of care delivery processes, terminals at the central nurse station, automated data entry & retrieval, integration with other information systems b. Support of care delivery processes, terminals at the central nurse station, manual data entry & retrieval, integration with other information systems c. Support of care delivery processes, terminals at the bedside or point of care, automated data entry & retrieval, integration with other information systems d. Support of care delivery processes, terminals at the bedside or point of care, manual data entry & retrieval, integration with other information systems 36. Which of the following situations represent drawbacks to implementing a POC system? a. Expensive to buy, customize, & install b. Status quo of organization is disturbed c. Change in organization is required for implementation to proceed smoothly d. Software may not be clinician friendly e. All of the above 37. A nursing diagnosis is best described by which of the following statements? 10 12 a. A measurable patient condition or perception resulting from one or more nursing interventions b. A taxonomy of nurse-sensitive patient outcomes c. Any direct care treatment that a nurse performs on behalf of a client d. A clinical judgment about an individual, family or community’s responses to actual or potential health problems and life processes e. Assessment activities to identify nursing diagnosis & gather data for physician identification of a medical diagnosis 38. In which stage of the five level patient record would information from alternative forms of health care be included? a. Electronic patient record b. Automated medical record c. Provider base electronic medical record d. Computerized medical record e. Electronic health record 39. Why is there an absence of nursing data in national and regional databases? a. The profession cannot agree upon & offer a set of clearly defined, reliable & standardized data elements b. The profession’s diversity does not require standardization of data c. The data collected by Nursing is not useful to Third Party Payers & does not need to be collected d. The existence of a standardized Nursing language makes this unnecessary 40. Which of the following statements best describes why the Nursing intervention classification (NIC) is important to Nursing Informatics? a. Each NIC intervention has a unique number which allows computerization of the information b. Each NIC intervention has been linked with a nursing diagnosis & with an Omaha system problem c. Each NIC intervention has been linked with a specific NOC d. Each NIC intervention is part of a comprehensive, standardized language specific to the practice of nursing 41. Heuristics can be defined as the study of: a. Holographic images b. Rules of thumb based on a person’s past experiences c. The use of natural language in robots d. Computer chips that give sight & hearing to robot 42. The thirteen data sets approved by the American Nurses Association include which of the following lists? a. SNOMED RT, NANDA, NIC, NOC, International Classification of Disease- 10 (ICD-10) 11 15 56. It is intrinsically necessary to understand how a system will be used and who will use it. What follows is that the system users must have a voice in the development, design, and use. a. True b. False 57. An organizations’ philosophy of information use provides framework for development of security policies, procedures & practices within organization a. True b. False 58. Nursing Informatics has been designated as an area of specialty nursing practice by the American Nurses Association. a. True b. False 59. A hospital database should contain data that facilitates analysis of traditional management questions relating to employees, salaries, & productivity. a. True b. False 60. A hospital database should contain data necessary to analyze work of clinical departments. a. True b. False 61. A hospital database which integrates data from several computer systems within the institution can directly support patient care. a. True b. False 62. Hospital databases should provide access to patient records for clinical research purposes. a. True b. False 63. New information needs of hospitals must include information that analyzes the cost of patient care & its interdependency with the quality of care. a. True b. False 64. Hospital Information Systems make it possible to collect & store large amounts of data beyond 14 16 the institution's immediate needs. a. True b. False 65. The traditional view of information in the health care environment has been focused on the patient. a. True b. False 66. Clinical, empirical, & conceptual knowledge are essential components in the development of a discrete Nursing language. a. True b. False 67. The Health on the Net Foundation helps patients to evaluate health related web sites. a. True b. False 68. The professional and/or contractual duty to safeguard the secrecy of patient information regardless of how it is acquired, stored, processed, generated, retrieved, or transmitted is known as confidentiality. a. True b. False 69. Early hospital information systems were primarily used for non patient care procedures such as billing, payroll, & personnel. a. True b. False 70. Consumer health informatics can best be described as tools that empower the patient to make more informed choices about healthcare issues. a. True b. False Part III: Essay Pick ONE of the following questions and answer it directly on the exam. (5 points) 1. Describe one of the VR simulations used in treating phobias. 2. It has been said that the promise of nanotechnology is to “allow doctors to execute curative & reconstructive procedures in the body at cellular & molecular levels. Discuss your concerns & opinions on the use of nanotechnology in medicine. What do you think are the ethical, legal, & moral dilemmas involved in developing & using this new technology? If you could extend life 15 17 through the use of this technology, would you? Why or why not? 3. We know that nursing unit activities represent the core of patient care in the hospital. Discuss why nurses have been reluctant to become involved in the development and implementation of information systems in health care. 4. Nursing and technology frequently clash in the clinical practice area. Nurses rightly (or wrongly) think that technology interferes with their care of patients and that “high tech” means “high touch” is absent from care. Do you think this is true? Do nurses who are able to use technology (and do) sacrifice their ability to care for patients? 5. Discuss the potential uses of Geographic Information Systems in community health, epidemiology, public health, and hospital administration. Consider such topics as the aging population, distribution of health care, distribution of care services, and development of nursing knowledge. . Arachnophobia is a phobia of spiders. Virtual reality is used to treat because it is more controlled and cost less than having an actual spider to treat patients. A patient puts on the VR helmet and glasses and wears a glove while a 3D spider movers across the screen. The spider gets closer and closer and can walk up the patient’s arm. Virtual reality is used to treat phobias such as acrophobia and arachnophobia, along with eating disorders. Virtual reality is good therapy for people with phobias because it safely elicits fear and the encounter can be controlled. It is also good because patients are more likely to want to be involved in VR therapy because it is not real and are interested in the technology. 16
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