A 72-year-old client who is hospitalized will be going on anticoagulant therapy and will require home healthcare nurses to visit once weekly to draw blood for coagulation studies. What coverage does the client have that will cover this service?
- A. Medicaid
- B. Medicare Part A
- C. Medicare Part B
- D. Medicare Part C
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Medicare covers individuals who are 65 years of age or older, permanently disabled workers of any age with specific disabilities, and persons with end-stage renal disease. Medicare Part A covers hospital care, skilled care, hospice, and home health services. Medicare Part B covers medically necessary services such as physician services that are not covered under Part A. Medicare Part C is the Medicare Advantage Plan and includes Parts A and B. Medicaid coverage is coverage for indigent patients that are unable to afford healthcare and qualify financially.
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The Healthy People 2030 initiative targets the improvement of health for all. In addition to eliminating health disparities, what are the broad goals of this plan?
- A. Increasing technological innovations
- B. Preventing treatable problems
- C. Applying a systematic approach to health improvement
- D. Increasing the quality and length of a healthy life
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Two broad goals of the Healthy People 2030 initiative are to increase quality and years of healthy life and eliminate health disparities. Healthy People 2030 initiatives will help with treatable problems but will not prevent problems. The initiative does not apply a systematic approach to health improvement or increase technological innovations.
The nurse is assisting with the development of a program to administer flu shots to a group of senior citizens. What type of prevention does this program reflect?
- A. Primary prevention
- B. Secondary prevention
- C. Tertiary prevention
- D. Prevalence
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Primary prevention is prevention of the development of disease in a susceptible or potentially susceptible population and includes health promotion and immunization. Secondary prevention is the early diagnosis and treatment to shorten duration and severity of an illness, reduce contagion, and limit complications. Tertiary prevention is healthcare to limit the degree of disability or promote rehabilitation in chronic, irreversible diseases. Prevalence is the number of cases of a disease in a specific population during a specific period.
A client comes to the clinic and reports being ill for several weeks but does not have insurance and has delayed care. What does the nurse understand about the overall healthcare reform goals that will address issues such as this client?
- A. The goal of healthcare reform is to provide care to women, infants, and children.
- B. The goal of healthcare reform is to provide more healthcare programs to address illness.
- C. The goal of healthcare reform is to provide quality healthcare for those that can afford it.
- D. The goal of healthcare reform is to provide affordable healthcare to more citizens.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The overall goal of healthcare reform is to provide affordable healthcare to more U.S. citizens. Other goals are to reduce the insurance companies' control of healthcare and to provide more assistance to senior citizens on fixed incomes. Providing care to women, infants and children and offering more healthcare programs to address illness may be results of healthcare reform but are not themselves the overall goal. Healthcare reform seeks to provide quality healthcare that is affordable to as many U.S. citizens as possible, not to only provide it to those who can already afford it.
A client with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease visits a local long-term care facility once a week to lead a bingo game for the residents. How does the nurse determine that this client is achieving a high level of wellness?
- A. The client enjoys the activity that the nurse provides to the clients.
- B. The client finds satisfaction in socialization with the residents.
- C. The client is achieving a high quality of life within the limits of the illness.
- D. The client needs to feel a part of a group setting.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Clients with chronic illness can achieve a high level of wellness if they can experience a high quality of life within the limits of that illness. By engaging in a personal and social activity weekly, this client would be considered healthy. Although the client may enjoy the activity, find satisfaction in socialization, or need to feel a part of a group, choosing to take part in an activity that promotes a high quality of life within the limits of the client's illness is what demonstrates wellness to the nurse.
The client is referred from the physician to a cardiologist for a cardiac catheterization to determine if the client has coronary artery disease. What type of care does the nurse understand that this is?
- A. Primary care
- B. Secondary care
- C. Tertiary care
- D. Acute care
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Secondary care includes referrals to facilities for additional testing such as cardiac catheterization, consultation, and diagnosis as well as emergency and acute care interventions. This client falls into this category due to the referral to the cardiologist for the cardiac catheterization. The client does not fall into the acute care category. Primary care would include being seen by the client's primary physician. Tertiary care focuses more on complex medical and surgical interventions, cancer care, rehabilitative services, long-term care such as burn care, and palliative and hospice care.
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