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HSC 380 Midterm Exam | Questions and Answers (Complete Solutions)

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HSC 380 Midterm Exam | Questions and Answers (Complete Solutions) Gender is as simple as being male or female: - false, it is a complex topic, one that providers need to have an understanding of it and the diverse ways people express and classify or lack of classifying their sexuality and biolog...

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  • November 11, 2024
  • 18
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • HSC 380
  • HSC 380
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Bri254
HSC 380 Midterm Exam



Gender is as simple as being male or female:

- false, it is a complex topic, one that providers need to have an understanding of it and
the diverse ways people express and classify or lack of classifying their sexuality and
biological sex.
- true, you are either one or the other

We are a market based health care system with social fixes. Some of the social fixes
are:

- medicare, medicaid, health insurance, tricare and IHS
- medicaid, social security, tricare and thermacare
- medicare, medicaid, Social Security, Tricare, and IHS
- all of things listed above

According to our text book a group of people who have a common ancestry that
distinguishes them from others by physical characteristics

- culture
- race
- ethnicity
- family

There are two major sources of unresolved grief for Native Americans: massive trauma
that has endured from generation to generation and (pick the BEST answer)

- the systematic destruction of traditional rituals of grief.
- the lack of education about Native American history.
- intense anger at the dominant culture.
- physical isolation from the rest of society.

A system in which public policies, institutional practices, cultural representations, and
other norms work in various, often reinforcing ways to perpetuate racial group inequity.
This identifies dimensions of our history and culture that have allowed privileges
associated with "whiteness" and disadvantages associated with "color" to endure and
adapt over time. This exists as a feature of the social, economic and political systems in
which we all exist.

- Environmental Racism
- Institutional Racism

,- Systemic Racism
- Political Racism

Representing the position that there are no moral absolutes, no moral right or wrong.
This position would assert that our morals evolve and change with social norms over a
period of time. This philosophy allows people to mutate ethically as the culture,
knowledge, and technology change in society. Slavery is a good example of (For
hundreds of years America felt slavery was morally execrable, where now we know that
it violates a persons human rights.)

- Diversity
- Ethical Relativism
- Culture
- Human Rights

Within the delivery of health care a provider that understands and attend to the total
context of the patients situation (within knowledge, skills and attitudes) as well as
including the patent in the care plan is (give the BEST answer) is practicing

- patient care plan
- patient centered care
- health literacy and culture care
- cultural competency and patience centered care

If a person every time they get on an airplane, they look to see if the pilot is a white
male. If it is not, they feel uneasy flying. Yet this person has many friends that come
from a variety of cultures and religions. This can be one example of a(n)

- unconscious bias
- racist
- systemic grouping
- fascist

Teaching/knowing the history of culture/race/demographic of people is not important
when it comes to a caring for that population. It does not help with health outcomes.

- True
- False

Unequal outcomes exist across various subgroups in America. What do we not want to
do?

- Make quick reactions based on the first death from an disparity
- Within surveying the prevalence rates, we need to look at small samples and larger
sample areas to get a true picture of the issue, not just a small sample side in the area
- Survey the past data, and start collecting new data on the condition and prevalence

, rates
- look at both secondary and primary data on the situation

This type of racism refers to the institutional rules, regulations, policies or government
and/or corporate decisions that deliberately target certain communities for locally
undesirable land uses and lax enforcement of zoning and environmental laws, resulting
in communities being disproportionately exposed to toxic and hazardous waste based
upon race. It is a well-documented that communities of color and low-income
communities are disproportionately impacted by polluting industries (and very
specifically, hazardous waste facilities) and lax regulation of these industries.

- Systemic Racism
- Institutional Racism
- Cultural Racism
- Environmental Racism

Community psychology is best described as:

- counseling sessions which occur within the community system of schools, churches,
and other social organizations.
- interventions that are focused on adapting to the needs of the family and community.
- interventions that are initiated by members of the community by the community
- interventions that address issues at all levels of the community system.

Bicultural couples tend to demonstrate extremes in

- healthy functioning.
- acceptance of bicultural relationships and marriage.
- interdependence.
- conflicts of cultural codes.

Biracial children face not only prejudices but also

- racism
- may need help in sorting out issues of self-definition
- are probably aware of race and ethnicity earlier than mono-ethnic children
- have the task of integrating two cultural identities,
- All of the above
- none of the above, they just have to navigate racism and prejudices like their minority
parents do

Several behaviors cause an increase in racial identity issues in adolescence. Which is
NOT one of them?

-Changes in school grouping
-Rejection of characteristics perceived as White

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