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Gynecologic Health Care, 4th Edition Kerri Durnell
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TEST BANK For Gynecologic Health Care: With an Introduction to Prenatal and Postpartum Care, 4th Edition by Kerri Durnell Schuiling, Verified Chapters 1 - 35, Complete Newest Version
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Gynecologic Health Care, 4th Edition Kerri Durnell
TEST BANK For Gynecologic Health Care: With an Introduction to Prenatal and Postpartum Care, 4th Edition by Kerri Durnell Schuiling, Verified Chapters 1 - 35, Complete Newest Version TEST BANK For Gynecologic Health Care: With an Introduction to Prenatal and Postpartum Care, 4th Edition by Kerri Du...
TEST BANK Gynecologic Health Care: With an
Introduction to Prenatal and Postpartum Care
4th Edition by Kerri Durnell Schuiling; Chapters 1 - 35
,Gynecologic Health Care
Chapter 1 A Feminist Perspective of Women's Health &
Chapter 2 Racism and Health Disparities
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS
Select the one correct answer to each of the following questions.
1. Which of the following best defines the term “gender” as used in this text?
a) A person’s sex
b) A person’s sex as defined by society
c) A societal response to a person’s self-representation as a man or woman
d) A person’s biological presentation as defined by himself or herself
2. Which factor bears most on women’s health care today?
a) The complexity of women’s health
b) Women’s status and position in society
c) Population growth
d) The economy
3. Why is acknowledging the oppression of women more difficult within Western
societies?
a) The multiplicity of minority groups complicates the issue.
b) The availability of health care makes acknowledgment more difficult.
c) The diversity of the news media clouds the issue.
d) Affluence and increased opportunities mask oppression.
4. Which of the following most accurately defines “oppression” as used in the text?
a) Not having a choice
b) Not having a voice
c) An act of tyranny
d) A feeling of being burdened
5. In what way does a model of care based on a feminist perspective contrast sharply
with a biomedical model?
a) It provides a forum for the exploration of gender issues.
b) It seeks equal distribution of power within the healthcare interaction.
c) It emphasizes women’s rights.
d) It opens new avenues for women’s health care.
6. Gender is rooted in and shaped by .
a) society, biology
,Gynecologic Health Care
b) self-representation, societal expectations
c) biology, environment and experience
d) biology, hormones
7. Women’s health risks, treatments, and approaches are not always based in science
and biology because
a) they are often based on outdated treatments and approaches.
b) they are determined by social expectations and gender assumptions.
c) they often rely on alternative treatments and approaches.
d) scientific research often fails to take women into consideration.
8. Reproductive rights were added to the World Health Organization’s human rights
framework in the last ?
a) 5 years
b) 10 years
c) 20 years
d) 40 years
9. “Safe Motherhood” was added to the human rights framework in order to
a) address maternal morbidity and mortality on a global level
b) meet a legal obligation
c) correct an injustice
d) correct an oversight
10. What is a chief failing of the biomedical model in regards to women’s health care?
a) Its reliance on studies comprised exclusively of males
b) Its consideration of women as central the model
c) Its emphasis on science and medicine
d) Its limited definition of “health” as “the absence of disease”
11. The social model of health places the focus of health on
a) the community.
b) the individual.
c) environmental conditions.
d) scientific research.
12. Which question below supports the strategy: “Identify women’s agency in the midstof
social constraint and the biomedical paradigm.”?
a) “Are ‘all women’ the same?”
b) “Why do you care about the issue?”
c) “Are women really victims or are they acting with agency?”
d) “Who has a choice within the context of health?”
13. What had been a significant problem in medical research well into the 1990s?
a) The focus on randomized clinical trials over epidemiological investigations
b) The lack of representation of women in research trials
,Gynecologic Health Care
c) The lack of research related to gynecology
d) The focus on randomized clinical trials over observational research
14. Gender differences in heart disease can be found in
a) diagnosis.
b) treatment.
c) identification of symptoms.
d) all of the above.
15. What opportunities are created by applying feminist strategies to gynecologic health?
a) Better insight into research methods related to gynecology
b) Better access to the populations affected by gynecologic health
c) Better understandings from a wellness-oriented, women-centered framework
d) Better understandings of the social construction of gender
ANSWER KEY
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS
16. c
17. b
18. d
19. a
20. b
21. c
22. b
23. c
24. a
25. d
26. a
27. c
28. b
29. d
,Gynecologic Health Care
30. c
CHAPTER 2 Women's Growth and Development Across the Life Span
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS
Select the one correct answer to each of the following questions.
31. How does Erick Erikson’s grand theory of human development differ for females?
a) It recognizes achieving autonomy as a primary focus.
b) It assumes only men desire autonomy.
c) It assumes female dependence on another in order to achieve a sense of self.
d) It assumes females desire dependence on others.
32. What is true about human development theories published before the 1970s?
a) They are based on interviews conducted only with men.
b) They assume androcentric models can be applied correctly to women.
c) They frame women’s development as flawed in comparison to the standard.
d) All of the above.
• What is the intention of the newer feminist models
of development?
• To offer a new model within the traditional biomedical focus.
• To offer alternatives to the constrained and previously misapplied models.
• To replace male generalist models with female generalist models.
• To present a contrast to privileged, white male-based models.
33. What is a key limitation of prevailing developmental models for women?
a) Gender differences assumed to be biologically
determined are more often socially constructed.
b) They present conflicting and misapplied models.
c) Gender differences are assumed to be socially prescribed.
d) Similarities between male and female are emphasized over differences.
34. What event in female development marks the beginning of a tension between
biologic changes and the social context?
a) Turning 18 years old
b) The onset of menses
c) The accumulation of adipose tissue with the onset of puberty
d) Pregnancy
35. How many stages does the Tanner scale use to stage sexual maturity?
a) 3 stages
b) 5 stages
c) 6 stages
d) 8 stages
,Gynecologic Health Care
36. What is the median age for the onset of menstruation for adolescent girls in the
United States?
a. 9.8
b. 10.8
c. 12.8
d. 13.8
37. What factor limits an individual’s ability to function productively as an adult?
a) Failure to take into account social and cultural norms
b) The inability to move through the world with credibility and respect
c) Poverty
d) Failure to negotiate the developmental tasks of adolescence successfully
38. The type of thinking that influences the risk-taking behaviors of adolescence
a) involves the use of symbols, advanced reasoning and expanded possibilities.
b) works proactively to achieve autonomy.
c) encourages experimentation and foresight.
d) is rooted in the immediate and concrete.
39. What narrow term is often used to refer to the period of Early Adulthood?
a) Productive years
b) Reproductive years
c) Young Adulthood
d) Adolescence
40. Why have women’s changing roles come at a cost to their health?
a) Increases in caregiving expectations compromise health
b) Balancing competing demands increases stress
c) Less attention is being placed on health care
d) Men’s roles have not changed in relation to the change in women’s roles
41. How do Franz and White (1985) expand Erikson’s theory of development?
a) By proposing a two-pathway process that includes both
individuation and capacity for attachment
b) By refining Erikson’s single pathway to include capacity for attachment
c) By expanding issues around career and lifestyle
d) By expanding issues around identity
42. What factors affect the mood changes many women in midlife suffer?
a) Deficiencies of estrogen
b) Psychological transitions
c) Cultural beliefs and expectations
d) All of the above
,Gynecologic Health Care
43. What is the primary reason many older women live in poverty and have health
problems?
a) They outnumber older men.
b) They have outlived their support systems.
c) Their cognitive abilities decline.
d) They must contend with ageism and sexism.
ANSWER KEY
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS
44. c
45. d
46. b
47. a
48. c
49. b
50. c
51. d
52. a
53. b
54. b
55. a
56. d
57. b
Chapter 3 Women's Growth and Development Across the Life Span
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS
Select the one correct answer to each of the following questions.
58. According to Wuest (1994), the major goal of feminist research is
a) to change the design and evaluation of research.
,Gynecologic Health Care
b) to liberate women from societal expectations.
c) to emancipate the world from systemic bias based on gender and class.
d) to expand notions of gender beyond stereotypes.
59. What concern prompted the initiation of the modern EBP movement in health care?
a) That clinicians often failed to evaluate the effectiveness of their own care
b) That expert opinion was valued over scientific evidence
c) That scientific evidence was valued over expert opinion
d) That patients were demanding more evidence to support care decisions
60. Quine’s (1952) concept of a web of interconnecting beliefs and knowledge supports
a) the inferiority of quantitative research.
b) a multiple-method approach to examining phenomena.
c) the superiority of qualitative research.
d) the difficulties of establishing best practices.
61. Why are multiple approaches needed to identify best clinical practices?
a) To reflect the multiple variables within clinical settings
b) To offer alternatives to poorly functioning practices
c) To address the complexity of the human condition
d) To ensure that no single approach dominates
62. What is the third part of the clinical decision-making triad that includes clinical
experience and patient preference?
a) An investigation of treatment pathways
b) A consultation with clinical management
c) An evaluation of current clinical research
d) Establishing research methodology
63. How many classifications are used by the U.S. Preventative Service Task Force to
gauge the strength of recommendations for using research evidence in clinical practice?
a) 3
b) 5
c) 6
d) 8
64. What are the corresponding clinical terms for Type I and Type II errors in
quantitative research?
a) “false positive” and “false negative”
b) “negativity” and “positivity”
c) “bias I” and “bias II”
d) “evidence flaw” and “process flaw”
65. What key factor shapes the methodology of qualitative research?
a) A person’s view of the world
b) The ability to establish control over variables
,Gynecologic Health Care
c) The ability to establish cause and effect
d) A well-conducted meta-analysis
66. What is a difference between quantitative and qualitative research?
a) One follows strict protocols while the other does not.
b) One deduces the reason why something happens and the
other induces why it happens.
c) One places greater emphasizes on the expansion of knowledge.
d) All of the above.
67. What field of study informs qualitative research?
a) Anthropology
b) Ecological psychology
c) Sociolinguistics
d) All of the above
68. Which research question most closely exemplifies a qualitative approach?
a) Why do some women experience postpartum depression?
b) How does physical exercise affect menopause?
c) How does Kegel exercise affect a woman’s perinatal outcomes?
d) Does a specific method of contraception cause weight gain?
69. What is a recognized limitation of EBP?
a) Emphasis on the routinization of practice
b) Over-reliance on RCT-derived results
c) The challenge of staying abreast of current research
d) All of the above
70. What is the purpose of the Stetler (2001) model of research utilization?
a) To weigh the risks and benefits of EBP
b) To supply methods for critiquing evidence
c) To encourage a synthesis of all research methods
d) To help move best evidence into the clinical practice setting
71. One common barrier to using EBP in clinical settings is the lack of confidence in
critiquing research studies. The second is
a) the lack of time to find studies.
b) the lack of willing colleagues.
c) the lack of support from management.
d) the lack of protocol in using EBP.
72. What is the single most important action a clinician can take to advance EBP in the
clinical setting?
a) Employ quantitative research methods
b) Employ qualitative research methods
c) Question everything
, Gynecologic Health Care
d) Consult with management
ANSWER KEY
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS
73. c
74. a
75. b
76. c
77. c
78. b
79. a
80. a
81. b
82. d
83. a
84. d
85. d
86. a
87. c
Chapter 4 Using Evidence to Support Quality Clinical Practice
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. In evaluating the level of a pregnant womans risk of having a low-birth-weight (LBW) infant,
which factor is the most important for the nurse to consider?
a. African-American race
b. Cigarette smoking
c. Poor nutritional status
d. Limited maternal education
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