Community and Public Health Nursing
10th Edition Rector Test Bank
Community and Public Health Nursing
10th Edition Rector Test Bank
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Questions and Answers, With Rationales
Community and Public Health Nursing 10th Edition Rector Test Bank
Chapter 1 The Journey Begins: Introduction
1.
After teaching a group of nursing students
about the similarities and differences between
public health and community health, which of
the following statements by a nursing student
would indicate knowledge of the similarities
and differences between public health and
community health?
A)
“Community health nursing is defined as
nursing care that is provided in a community
setting, rather than an institutional setting.”
B)
“Public health nursing is defined as nursing
care that is provided in an institutional
setting.”
C) “Public health nursing is focused on the
health of individuals.”
D)
“Community health nursing can shape the
quality of community health services and
improve the health of the general public.”
Ans: D
Feedback:
Operating within an environment of rapid
change and increasingly complex challenges,
this nursing specialty holds the potential to
shape the quality of community health
services and improve the health of the general
public.
2.
Which of the following statements would best
describe the difference between public health
nursing and community health nursing?
A)
Public health nursing is focused on the private
aspects of health, and community health
nursing is focused on the public aspects of
health.
B)
In our textbook, the term community health
practice refers to a focus on specific,
designated communities and is a part of the
larger public health effort.
C)
Public health nursing and community health
nursing relate to the very same types of
services and perspectives.
D)
Both public health nursing and community
health nursing are practiced exclusively
within institutions.
Ans:
B
Feedback:
In this textbook, community health practice
refers to
a focus on specific, designated
communities. It is
a part of the larger public
health effort and recognizes the fundamental
concepts and principles of public health as its
birthright and foundation for practice. Public
health nursing is focused on the public aspects
of health. Public health nursing and
community health nursing have distinctive
types of services and perspectives. Neither
public health nursing nor community health
nursing is practiced exclusively within
institutions.
3. Which of the following is most accurate about
the concept of community?
A)
A community is
a collection of people who
share some important features of their lives.
B) Community members live in the same
geographic location.
C) Community members are biologically related.
D)
A community is made up of people who do
not necessarily interact with one another and
do not necessarily share
a sense of belonging
to that group.
Ans:
A
Feedback:
The broad definition of
a community is
a
collection of people who share some
important features of their lives. Community
members may not live in the same geographic
location as in
a common
-interest community
or
a community of solution.
A population is
made up of people who do not necessarily
interact with one another and do not
necessarily share
a sense of belonging to that
group.
4.
A group of students are reviewing material for a test on populations, communities, and
aggregates. Which of the following indicates
that the students understand these concepts?
A) Members of
a population share
a sense of
belonging.
B) Communities and populations are types of
aggregates.
C) Individuals of
a community are loosely
connected.
D) Members of an aggregate share
a strong bond.
Ans:
B
Feedback:
An aggregate refers to
a mass of grouping of
distinct individuals who are considered as
a
whole and who are loosely associated with
one another. Communities and populations
are types of aggregates.
A population is made
up of people who do not necessarily interact
with one another and do not necessarily share a sense of belonging to the group. A
community is
a collection of people who
chose to interact with one another because of
common interests, characteristics, or goals,
which form the basis for
a sense of unity or
belonging. [Show Less]