Deck 4: Patient Perspectives

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Question
Because you realize that patients view and describe medical experiences within the ongoing stream of their life events, you listen patiently while Mr. Morris tells you about the last time someone drew blood from him, including the fact that his wife passed out during the experience. Mr. Morris's way of viewing and talking about medical concerns is best described as:

A) The Voice of Medicine
B) The Voice of Lifeworld
C) The Therapeutic Voice
D) The Vocabulary of the Untrained
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Question
"I will treat cancer the way I have treated all other challenges in my life. I will proceed with life as usual. I won't let this change me." According to Kathy Charmaz's stages of identity management, this is a common sentiment during which stage?

A) Restored self
B) Contingent personal identity
C) Salvaged self
D) Supernormal identity
Question
is a relatively enduring set of characteristics that define a person.

A) Characterization
B) Personal identity
C) Biopsychosocialism
D) Personality coefficient
Question
"This all started when I went on vacation. I noticed that my eyes were especially sensitive to the sun. I figured it was because the sun was brighter in Florida. But then my eyes kept hurting, even after we got home." The tendency of patients to define health concerns within the context of their everyday activities is called:

A) The Voice of Lifeworld
B) The Therapeutic Voice
C) The Voice of Pharmacology
D) A Healing Vocabulary
Question
According to Kathy Charmaz's stages of identity management, during long-term illnesses:

A) People in the supernormal identity stage have accepted the effects of the illness and developed new (even improved) identities for themselves.
B) During the contingent personal identity stage, people admit they cannot do everything they could do before the illness.
C) In the salvaged-self stage, people refuse to admit that the illness affects their identity at all.
D) All of these are true.
Question
All of the following are required by informed consent laws EXCEPT:

A) Patients must be informed about treatment risks, benefits, and options.
B) Patients must be deemed capable of understanding the information provided to them.
C) Patients must be informed that they can cease medical treatments if they wish.
D) Patients who consent to medical treatments waive their right to sue for malpractice.
Question
Which of the following best describes the Voice of Lifeworld?

A) It is usually focused on specific details.
B) We learn to speak it gradually as we become accustomed to medical settings.
C) It is typically focused more on feelings than on evidence.
D) Health professionals are usually more adept at it than patients are.
Question
Which of the following best represents information in your textbook concerning patients' cooperation with treatment advice?

A) Patients who do not follow treatment advice deserve whatever happens to them.
B) Effective care providers ask patients' feedback about diagnosis and treatment advice.
C) Medical compliance is the biggest issue inflating health care expenditures in the United States today.
D) Most patients are in denial about the causes of their illnesses.
Question
According to Kathy Charmaz's stages of identity management, what stages do people with chronic illnesses usually experience?

A) Denial, anger, acceptance, coping, redefined self
B) Precontemplation, contemplation, decision-making, acting
C) Supernormal identity, restored self, contingent personal identity, salvaged self
D) Denial, resentment, soul searching, return to previous self
Question
Before you have your wisdom teeth removed, you are asked to sign paperwork indicating that you understand the risks involved and are willing to undergo the procedure. This is best described as:

A) Informed consent
B) Iterative health literacy
C) Compulsory cooperation
D) A process of biomedical convergence
Question
You are asked to review patient satisfaction research and make a presentation to your colleagues. Which of the following best describes the conclusions of research about patient satisfaction?

A) Patients judge care providers on the following factors (in order of importance): technical skills, good bedside manner, high-tech facilities, clean waiting rooms and exam rooms.
B) Patients more often judge care providers on how they communicate than on their technical skills.
C) Patients look for the Four C's: cooperation, consent, coercion, and competence.
D) The keys to patients' satisfaction with their care providers are affordable prices, convenience, and visible results.
Question
You are in charge of tracking how often and how thoroughly patients at the clinic where you work follow medical advice. Based on what you read in the text, what is average around the United States?

A) Patients follow medical advice completely about 50% to 60% of the time.
B) Patients follow medical advice except in rare circumstances.
C) About 75% of patients follow medical advice, although they may not agree with it.
D) Well-educated patients are more likely to follow medical advice than undereducated patients.
Question
Before undergoing cardiovascular testing, Mrs. Henderson is given a stack of forms to read and sign. You notice that she seems to have difficulty reading the forms, although she signs each one. Based on informed consent laws:

A) The medical center cannot be sued because the staff showed Mrs. Henderson the potential outcomes, regardless of whether she understood them or not.
B) Medical professionals are responsible for making sure Mrs. Henderson understands the treatment information provided to her.
C) Once Mrs. Henderson signs the consent forms, she cannot change her mind about undergoing the procedures described.
D) Once she has signed the forms, Mrs. Henderson will not be allowed to sue the medical team.
Question
When a good friend of yours is diagnosed with arthritis, he doesn't want his friends at college to know. "People think of it as an old-person disease," he says. "I think my friends will look at me differently if they know I have it." He is experiencing a threat to his:

A) Social identity
B) Psychological reactance
C) Ego permeability
D) Rhetorical salvation
Question
Soon after your uncle had a stroke, he proclaimed that he would be "climbing mountains in no time." Since then, he is not quite as optimistic, but he still feels that the stroke won't change him. He has moved from the _________ stage of identity management to the ________ stage.

A) salvaged; restored
B) grandiose; contingent
C) denial; realist
D) supernormal; restored-self
Question
Your friend William has agreed to take part in a medical study. William has signed all the paperwork and wonders: If he doesn't do well, can he still withdraw from the study? Based on the book's coverage of informed consent laws, you are able to tell him:

A) He may withdraw from the study at any time.
B) He may withdraw only after the study is at least 30% complete.
C) He may withdraw from the study if he is willing to pay an early withdrawal fee.
Question
Which of the following is the best example of the Voice of Lifeworld?

A) I have a sharp pain in my right elbow.
B) I have been feeling pain for 10 days.
C) The pain in my arm interferes with my ability to do school work.
D) I have a family history of weak joints.
Question
Having survived a heart attack, your colleague Robin accepts that she will always have to pay close attention to her health, but she says those changes have become a normal part of her life now. When we integrate former aspects of self with current limitations, we have reached the stage called ___________.

A) transformational transaction
B) salvaged self
C) reinforced identity
D) public proclamation
Question
Your employer recently surveyed patients to see how often they follow medical advice. The results were discouragingly low. According to your book, all of the following are common reasons for low cooperation rates EXCEPT:

A) The advice may be difficult or impossible for the patient to follow.
B) Patients may disagree with the diagnosis.
C) Patients may perceive that they do not need the treatment or that the treatment has already worked.
D) Based on elaboration likelihood model, patients may ignore medical advice because they have minimal commitment to elaboration.
Question
. A patient of yours says that she is a proud member of the "I Survived Malaria" club. We adopt a identity when we simultaneously define an illness and our alignment toward it.

A) semantic
B) tertiary
C) quasi-collaborative
D) symmetrical
Question
Patients typically judge care providers more on their interpersonal skills than on their technical skills.
Question
Many people prefer the term "patient cooperation" to "patient compliance," because cooperation implies that patients are active participants in medical care, not just obedient parties expected to comply with "doctor's orders."
Question
Physicians' reputations and hospital privileges may be damaged by treatment failures, even if patients involved have not followed their medical advice.
Question
If patients do not follow medical advice, they lose their opportunity to sue physicians and other caregivers for malpractice.
Question
The Voice of Medicine and the Voice of Lifeworld overlap to a large extent when the goal is preventing disease and injury rather than just treating them.
Question
People often leave the doctor's office already knowing they cannot or will not follow through with treatment advice.
Question
In the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, African American men were enrolled without their knowledge in a medical experiment.
Question
In the "Agony of Uncertainty" case study, a 65-year-old man feels pressured into agreeing to a procedure he doesn't fully understand.
Question
Patients often communicate in hesitant and nonassertive ways because they are uncertain what is expected of them and afraid to seem rude or ignorant.
Question
The Voice of Lifeworld is primarily oriented to evidence, measurement, and precision.
Question
As you describe your concerns, you have the sense that the nurse is waiting for you to get to the point, as he considers it. Explain the ways that a patient's philosophy of health and illness traditionally differs from that of health professionals.
Question
Part of your new job involves improving patient satisfaction at the clinic where you work. Based on research about patient preferences, describe some steps you might take to make sure you are meeting patients' expectations.
Question
Your Aunt Penny was recently diagnosed with diabetes. Name and describe the four stages in Kathy Charmaz's model of identity management during chronic illness. For each state, create a statement your aunt might make that illustrates her feelings during that stage.
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Deck 4: Patient Perspectives
1
Because you realize that patients view and describe medical experiences within the ongoing stream of their life events, you listen patiently while Mr. Morris tells you about the last time someone drew blood from him, including the fact that his wife passed out during the experience. Mr. Morris's way of viewing and talking about medical concerns is best described as:

A) The Voice of Medicine
B) The Voice of Lifeworld
C) The Therapeutic Voice
D) The Vocabulary of the Untrained
B
Explanation: The Voice of Lifeworld is concerned with feelings and events.
2
"I will treat cancer the way I have treated all other challenges in my life. I will proceed with life as usual. I won't let this change me." According to Kathy Charmaz's stages of identity management, this is a common sentiment during which stage?

A) Restored self
B) Contingent personal identity
C) Salvaged self
D) Supernormal identity
D
Explanation: Supernormal is a stage of identify management in which a person with a serious illness is determined not to let the illness stop them from being better than ever.
3
is a relatively enduring set of characteristics that define a person.

A) Characterization
B) Personal identity
C) Biopsychosocialism
D) Personality coefficient
B
Explanation: A person's identity might involve being a student, son, daughter, parent, athlete, kind, smart, energetic, or so on.
4
"This all started when I went on vacation. I noticed that my eyes were especially sensitive to the sun. I figured it was because the sun was brighter in Florida. But then my eyes kept hurting, even after we got home." The tendency of patients to define health concerns within the context of their everyday activities is called:

A) The Voice of Lifeworld
B) The Therapeutic Voice
C) The Voice of Pharmacology
D) A Healing Vocabulary
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
According to Kathy Charmaz's stages of identity management, during long-term illnesses:

A) People in the supernormal identity stage have accepted the effects of the illness and developed new (even improved) identities for themselves.
B) During the contingent personal identity stage, people admit they cannot do everything they could do before the illness.
C) In the salvaged-self stage, people refuse to admit that the illness affects their identity at all.
D) All of these are true.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
All of the following are required by informed consent laws EXCEPT:

A) Patients must be informed about treatment risks, benefits, and options.
B) Patients must be deemed capable of understanding the information provided to them.
C) Patients must be informed that they can cease medical treatments if they wish.
D) Patients who consent to medical treatments waive their right to sue for malpractice.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which of the following best describes the Voice of Lifeworld?

A) It is usually focused on specific details.
B) We learn to speak it gradually as we become accustomed to medical settings.
C) It is typically focused more on feelings than on evidence.
D) Health professionals are usually more adept at it than patients are.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Which of the following best represents information in your textbook concerning patients' cooperation with treatment advice?

A) Patients who do not follow treatment advice deserve whatever happens to them.
B) Effective care providers ask patients' feedback about diagnosis and treatment advice.
C) Medical compliance is the biggest issue inflating health care expenditures in the United States today.
D) Most patients are in denial about the causes of their illnesses.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
According to Kathy Charmaz's stages of identity management, what stages do people with chronic illnesses usually experience?

A) Denial, anger, acceptance, coping, redefined self
B) Precontemplation, contemplation, decision-making, acting
C) Supernormal identity, restored self, contingent personal identity, salvaged self
D) Denial, resentment, soul searching, return to previous self
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Before you have your wisdom teeth removed, you are asked to sign paperwork indicating that you understand the risks involved and are willing to undergo the procedure. This is best described as:

A) Informed consent
B) Iterative health literacy
C) Compulsory cooperation
D) A process of biomedical convergence
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
You are asked to review patient satisfaction research and make a presentation to your colleagues. Which of the following best describes the conclusions of research about patient satisfaction?

A) Patients judge care providers on the following factors (in order of importance): technical skills, good bedside manner, high-tech facilities, clean waiting rooms and exam rooms.
B) Patients more often judge care providers on how they communicate than on their technical skills.
C) Patients look for the Four C's: cooperation, consent, coercion, and competence.
D) The keys to patients' satisfaction with their care providers are affordable prices, convenience, and visible results.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
You are in charge of tracking how often and how thoroughly patients at the clinic where you work follow medical advice. Based on what you read in the text, what is average around the United States?

A) Patients follow medical advice completely about 50% to 60% of the time.
B) Patients follow medical advice except in rare circumstances.
C) About 75% of patients follow medical advice, although they may not agree with it.
D) Well-educated patients are more likely to follow medical advice than undereducated patients.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Before undergoing cardiovascular testing, Mrs. Henderson is given a stack of forms to read and sign. You notice that she seems to have difficulty reading the forms, although she signs each one. Based on informed consent laws:

A) The medical center cannot be sued because the staff showed Mrs. Henderson the potential outcomes, regardless of whether she understood them or not.
B) Medical professionals are responsible for making sure Mrs. Henderson understands the treatment information provided to her.
C) Once Mrs. Henderson signs the consent forms, she cannot change her mind about undergoing the procedures described.
D) Once she has signed the forms, Mrs. Henderson will not be allowed to sue the medical team.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
When a good friend of yours is diagnosed with arthritis, he doesn't want his friends at college to know. "People think of it as an old-person disease," he says. "I think my friends will look at me differently if they know I have it." He is experiencing a threat to his:

A) Social identity
B) Psychological reactance
C) Ego permeability
D) Rhetorical salvation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Soon after your uncle had a stroke, he proclaimed that he would be "climbing mountains in no time." Since then, he is not quite as optimistic, but he still feels that the stroke won't change him. He has moved from the _________ stage of identity management to the ________ stage.

A) salvaged; restored
B) grandiose; contingent
C) denial; realist
D) supernormal; restored-self
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Your friend William has agreed to take part in a medical study. William has signed all the paperwork and wonders: If he doesn't do well, can he still withdraw from the study? Based on the book's coverage of informed consent laws, you are able to tell him:

A) He may withdraw from the study at any time.
B) He may withdraw only after the study is at least 30% complete.
C) He may withdraw from the study if he is willing to pay an early withdrawal fee.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Which of the following is the best example of the Voice of Lifeworld?

A) I have a sharp pain in my right elbow.
B) I have been feeling pain for 10 days.
C) The pain in my arm interferes with my ability to do school work.
D) I have a family history of weak joints.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Having survived a heart attack, your colleague Robin accepts that she will always have to pay close attention to her health, but she says those changes have become a normal part of her life now. When we integrate former aspects of self with current limitations, we have reached the stage called ___________.

A) transformational transaction
B) salvaged self
C) reinforced identity
D) public proclamation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Your employer recently surveyed patients to see how often they follow medical advice. The results were discouragingly low. According to your book, all of the following are common reasons for low cooperation rates EXCEPT:

A) The advice may be difficult or impossible for the patient to follow.
B) Patients may disagree with the diagnosis.
C) Patients may perceive that they do not need the treatment or that the treatment has already worked.
D) Based on elaboration likelihood model, patients may ignore medical advice because they have minimal commitment to elaboration.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
. A patient of yours says that she is a proud member of the "I Survived Malaria" club. We adopt a identity when we simultaneously define an illness and our alignment toward it.

A) semantic
B) tertiary
C) quasi-collaborative
D) symmetrical
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Patients typically judge care providers more on their interpersonal skills than on their technical skills.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Many people prefer the term "patient cooperation" to "patient compliance," because cooperation implies that patients are active participants in medical care, not just obedient parties expected to comply with "doctor's orders."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Physicians' reputations and hospital privileges may be damaged by treatment failures, even if patients involved have not followed their medical advice.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
If patients do not follow medical advice, they lose their opportunity to sue physicians and other caregivers for malpractice.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The Voice of Medicine and the Voice of Lifeworld overlap to a large extent when the goal is preventing disease and injury rather than just treating them.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
People often leave the doctor's office already knowing they cannot or will not follow through with treatment advice.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
In the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, African American men were enrolled without their knowledge in a medical experiment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In the "Agony of Uncertainty" case study, a 65-year-old man feels pressured into agreeing to a procedure he doesn't fully understand.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Patients often communicate in hesitant and nonassertive ways because they are uncertain what is expected of them and afraid to seem rude or ignorant.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The Voice of Lifeworld is primarily oriented to evidence, measurement, and precision.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
As you describe your concerns, you have the sense that the nurse is waiting for you to get to the point, as he considers it. Explain the ways that a patient's philosophy of health and illness traditionally differs from that of health professionals.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Part of your new job involves improving patient satisfaction at the clinic where you work. Based on research about patient preferences, describe some steps you might take to make sure you are meeting patients' expectations.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Your Aunt Penny was recently diagnosed with diabetes. Name and describe the four stages in Kathy Charmaz's model of identity management during chronic illness. For each state, create a statement your aunt might make that illustrates her feelings during that stage.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock for access to all 33 flashcards in this deck.