Deck 19: Death, dying, and Bereavement

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Question
In most industrialized nations today,doctors rely on __________ to signify death.

A) brain death
B) absence of heartbeat
C) absence of respiration
D) falling body temperature
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Question
Dying people

A) should be thought of as primarily physical beings, requiring care and attention to bodily functions.
B) benefit profoundly in their last days and hours from social support responsive to their needs for emotional and spiritual closure.
C) do not benefit from a focus on the mind or spirit during their last days.
D) should not be troubled with details about the dying process and instead should focus on pain management.
Question
We can ensure the most dignified exit possible by

A) allowing doctors and nurses to make all of the decisions for the dying person.
B) hiding or minimizing the truth about the diagnosis from the dying person.
C) assuring the dying person that everything will be okay and they will improve.
D) offering the dying person care, affection, companionship, and esteem.
Question
Which of the following statements about contemporary attitudes toward death is true?

A) Death anxiety-fear and apprehension of death-is widespread.
B) Few people reach adulthood without having experienced the death of someone they know well.
C) When death occurs, people of all ages take care of tasks that involve confronting it directly.
D) Because Americans are exposed to frequent images of death in the media, death anxiety is rare.
Question
Which of the following statements about helping a loved one die a "good death" is true?

A) It is best to talk about the past and avoid discussing the impending death.
B) Loved ones should remember that the dying person needs time alone.
C) It is best to be candid about death's certainty.
D) Loved ones should conceal or minimize their own grief.
Question
Which of the following statements about gender differences in death anxiety is true?

A) In both Eastern and Western cultures, women appear more anxious about death than men do.
B) Men are more likely than women to admit troubled feelings about mortality.
C) Women are more likely than men to admit troubled feelings about mortality.
D) Men are more likely than women to develop a sense of symbolic immortality.
Question
Which of the following individuals will likely experience the lowest level of death anxiety?

A) Marvin, a 93-year-old
B) Santiago, a 51-year-old
C) Joyce, a 35-year-old
D) Josiah, a 17-year-old
Question
Queenie,age 95,sees death as an opportunity to pass a legacy to her grandchildren and their grandchildren.As a result,she does not fear death.Queenie has a sense of

A) symbolic immortality.
B) death anxiety.
C) ego integrity.
D) body transcendence.
Question
The development of a national organ transplant program has been hindered in Japan because

A) the standard of death is brain death.
B) the standard of death is absence of heartbeat and respiration.
C) Japanese law does not allow organ donation.
D) those in a persistent vegetative state are considered dead.
Question
In industrialized countries,

A) most people die in the presence of loved ones rather than surrounded by doctors and nurses.
B) people usually die at home where family members attend their last moments.
C) opportunities to witness the physical aspects of death are less available today than in previous generations.
D) most people do not want to know how we die or grasp what is happening to a dying loved one.
Question
Mr.Johnson was in a skiing accident.He suffered traumatic head injuries when he came in contact with a tree.Mr.Johnson's cerebral cortex no longer registers electrical activity,but his brain stem remains active.Mr.Johnson

A) is brain dead.
B) is in the agonal phase of death.
C) has entered a persistent vegetative state.
D) is in the mortality phase of death.
Question
During mortality,

A) the individual's regular heartbeat disintegrates, causing muscle spasms and gasping.
B) resuscitation is still possible.
C) the individual passes into permanent death.
D) the heartbeat, circulation, breathing, and brain functioning stop.
Question
In the days or hours before death,

A) the person becomes very thirsty.
B) skin color becomes reddish.
C) body temperature rises.
D) the hands and feet feel cool.
Question
Dr.Snyder decided to devote her career to the study of death and dying.Dr.Snyder's interdisciplinary field is

A) gerontology.
B) thanatology.
C) geriatrics.
D) anthropology.
Question
In a study of devout __________,certain factors that appear repeatedly in Westerners' responses to death,such as fear of the body decaying and of the unknown,are absent.

A) Islamic Saudi Arabians
B) Tibetan Buddhists
C) European Roman Catholics
D) Israeli Jews
Question
Knowing his last days were near,Harrison chose to die at home.He was clear-minded during his final hours,allowing him to review his life and say farewell.Like Harrison,

A) about 20 percent of people experience a gentle death.
B) about 25 percent of people experience a long and drawn-out death.
C) most Americans die at home.
D) most people experience a quick, agony-free death.
Question
During the clinical death phase,

A) the individual's regular heartbeat disintegrates, causing muscle spasms and gasping.
B) resuscitation is no longer possible.
C) the individual passes into permanent death.
D) heartbeat, circulation, breathing, and brain functioning stop.
Question
When the transition from life to death is imminent,a person often moves through which of the following three phases?

A) clinical death, mortality, brain death
B) the agonal phase, clinical death, mortality
C) brain death, clinical death, mortality
D) the agonal phase, clinical death, brain death
Question
Death anxiety is especially low among adults

A) who regularly pray and attend services but doubt the existence of an afterlife.
B) who do not believe in a higher force or being.
C) who believe in a rewarding afterlife but rarely pray or attend services.
D) with deep faith in some form of higher force or being.
Question
The greatest dignity in death is in

A) succumbing suddenly.
B) passing without narcotic drug use.
C) overcoming pain without complaint.
D) the integrity of the life that precedes it.
Question
According to Kübler-Ross,most people who reach a state of peace and quiet about upcoming death do so

A) within the first two months after learning the diagnosis.
B) only in the last weeks or days before death.
C) only in the last hours or minutes before death.
D) after bargaining and before depression.
Question
Family members who __________ can make dying more difficult for a patient.

A) are brutally candid
B) play the denial "game"
C) question medical personnel
D) do not believe in an afterlife
Question
Dying of cancer,Janice promises God that she will devote her life to the church if He lets her live.According to Kübler-Ross,Janice is exhibiting which of the five typical responses to the prospect of death?

A) denial
B) anger
C) bargaining
D) acceptance
Question
According to Kübler-Ross,recognition that time is short promotes

A) denial.
B) depression.
C) anger.
D) acceptance.
Question
Which of the following statements about a dying person's reactions is true?

A) Depression in a dying person does not require treatment.
B) The course of an illness has little effect on the dying person's reactions.
C) About one-third of cancer patients experience severe depression.
D) In depressed terminal patients, life review is associated with earlier death.
Question
When he was dying of cancer,Jesse said,"Whenever I think I cannot stand the pain,I imagine riding my motorcycle along Route 66." Jesse views dying as

A) an experience to be transformed.
B) a mandate to live ever more fully.
C) part of life's journey.
D) imprisonment.
Question
According to Kübler-Ross,when denial,anger,and bargaining fail to postpone the illness,the terminally ill person

A) becomes depressed.
B) accepts death.
C) becomes enraged.
D) disengages from all but a few family members.
Question
Ruth regards death as a mandate to live ever more fully.In discussing her images of dying,Ruth is most likely to say,

A) "In a way, I feel like I'm already dead."
B) "After reading everything I could about my disease, I realized for the first time in my life I can handle anything."
C) "I've looked death in the eye, and now I'm really living."
D) "When I start to think too much about my illness, I recite the lyrics to my favorite songs."
Question
According to Kübler-Ross,the terminally ill person who reaches bargaining

A) grasps the inevitability of death.
B) denies the seriousness of the illness.
C) distorts the truth about his or her condition.
D) is despondent.
Question
The most serious drawback to Kübler-Ross's theory is that

A) dying people are unlikely to display denial after learning of their condition because most people trust doctors.
B) it looks at dying patients' thoughts and feelings outside the contexts that give them meaning.
C) a normal dying person goes through the five stages, but not in Kübler-Ross's sequence.
D) it fails to recognize that as dying people move closer to death, their reactions are predictable.
Question
Which of the following is considered to be part of dying a "good death"?

A) clarifying the meaning of one's life and death
B) being pain-free
C) relinquishing control to medical professionals
D) disengaging from loved ones
Question
In diverse cultures,people who are __________ report less death anxiety.

A) religious
B) clinically depressed
C) generally anxious
D) good at emotional self-regulation
Question
Carl is dying.He says,"In a way,I feel like I'm already dead." Carl views dying as

A) part of life's journey.
B) imprisonment.
C) a mandate to live ever more fully.
D) an experience to be transformed.
Question
__________ is associated with poorer survival.

A) Denial
B) Anger
C) Bargaining
D) Depression
Question
Kübler-Ross's five typical responses to the prospect of death

A) should be viewed as a fixed sequence.
B) are universal stages.
C) are applicable to the dying person's family members.
D) are best viewed as coping strategies.
Question
According to Kübler-Ross,a terminally ill person first reacts to the news that he or she is dying

A) by bargaining for extra time.
B) by denying the seriousness of the illness.
C) with anger.
D) with acceptance.
Question
Understanding the way that individuals __________ helps us appreciate the way they manage the dying process.

A) interact with close friends and family members
B) view spirituality and religion
C) view the medical profession
D) have coped with stressful life events in the past
Question
Before her death,Irene contacted her estranged sister and made amends.She took control of the time she had left,and confronted and prepared for death.Her death made sense in terms of her pattern of living and values.Irene experienced a(n)__________ death.

A) fixed
B) appropriate
C) ideal
D) passive
Question
According to Kübler-Ross,the underlying cause of a terminal person's anger is

A) death anxiety.
B) the unfairness of death.
C) depression.
D) poor self-regulation.
Question
Helen regards death as part of life's journey.Helen is most likely to say,

A) "I feel like the future has suddenly been taken away."
B) "You're not ready to live until you're ready to die."
C) "When I think too much about my illness, I recite poetry I memorized as a child."
D) "After reading everything I could about my illness, I really believe I can handle anything."
Question
Hospice

A) aims to provide a caring community sensitive to the dying person's needs.
B) provides spiritual and emotional support, but not palliative care.
C) emphasizes rehabilitation rather than high-quality terminal care.
D) death often triggers feelings of anger, frustration, and confusion.
Question
Mr.Martinez is dying.Because of their cultural beliefs,his Mexican-American family will probably

A) pretend there is nothing wrong in an attempt to prevent unnecessary stress.
B) forbid the doctors to talk to him about his condition because it will bring bad fortune to the family.
C) avoid informing him of his condition because they believe doing so hastens death.
D) talk openly and honestly about his condition, so that he can focus on resolving family conflicts before he dies.
Question
Most American deaths take place

A) at home.
B) in nursing homes.
C) in long-term care facilities.
D) in hospitals.
Question
Dying patients who feel they have much unfinished business to attend to are

A) less likely to bargain.
B) more likely to reach acceptance.
C) unlikely to disengage from family members.
D) more anxious about impending death.
Question
Dying in intensive care

A) is especially depersonalizing.
B) requires family intervention.
C) is viewed by many as ideal.
D) less stressful for the patient than dying at home.
Question
As they move through a hope trajectory,many dying patients first hope for

A) a cure.
B) prolonging life.
C) strength.
D) a peaceful death.
Question
Ten months after a __________ death,family members continue to report more psychological stress than do family members whose loved one died elsewhere.

A) home
B) hospice
C) hospital
D) nursing home
Question
Which of the following ethnic groups does not believe in telling terminally ill patients about their condition partly because dying disrupts important interdependent relationships?

A) Irish
B) French
C) Middle Eastern
D) Japanese
Question
Crisis intervention services are needed to help survivors cope with

A) a home death.
B) sudden death.
C) prolonged death.
D) a nursing home death.
Question
When Maea lay dying,relatives and friends gathered around him to give spiritual strength and comfort.Older adults and other experts conducted a karakia ceremony,reciting prayers asking for peace,mercy,and guidance from the creator.Maea is most likely a(n)

A) African American.
B) member of the Maori tribe.
C) Native American.
D) Buddhist.
Question
For many African Americans,

A) death is met with stoic self-control.
B) a dying loved one signals a crisis that unites family members in caregiving.
C) dying leads to Nirvana, a state beyond the world of suffering.
D) calming the dying person by reading sutras in key to caregiving.
Question
Pat's relatives read sutras to him to calm his mind and emphasize that dying leads to rebirth in a heaven of peace and relaxation.Pat is most likely a(n)

A) African American.
B) Native American.
C) Buddhist.
D) member of the Maori tribe.
Question
Few U.S.doctors are specially trained in

A) handling patients with AIDS.
B) managing pain in chronically ill and dying people.
C) gerontology.
D) thanatology.
Question
Once patients near death stop expressing hope,

A) those close to them must accept this.
B) death is imminent.
C) they have reached a state of denial
D) they will not reach acceptance.
Question
Which of the following statements about hospice care is true?

A) Staff has little time for contact with family members.
B) Hospice programs do not typically provide respite care.
C) Follow-up bereavement services are not typically offered to families.
D) Hospice programs encompass a continuum of care, from home to inpatient options.
Question
__________ care relieves pain and other symptoms rather than prolonging life.

A) Hospital
B) Palliative
C) Intensive
D) Skilled
Question
Nursing home

A) care emphasizes pain management and the resident's end-of-life preferences.
B) death is especially depersonalizing for patients and family members.
C) care emphasizes rehabilitation rather than high-quality terminal care.
D) care is aimed at easing physical, emotional, and spiritual suffering at death.
Question
In many Native American groups,

A) death is met with stoic self-control.
B) dying people believe that it is possible to reach a state beyond the world of suffering.
C) an illness is viewed as a crisis that unites family members.
D) a karakia ceremony is conducted to ask the creator for peace.
Question
Reggie is a 74-year-old hospice patient.Reggie will most likely die in

A) his own home or a homelike setting.
B) a hospice inpatient unit.
C) a nursing home.
D) a typical hospital room.
Question
To make dying at home feasible,__________ is essential.

A) hospice care
B) adequate support for the caregiver
C) trained nursing support
D) the presence of medical personnel
Question
After his father died,Jonah felt nauseous,was profoundly sad,and could not sleep,yet felt exhausted.Jonah's physical and psychological distress is known as

A) bereavement.
B) grief.
C) mourning.
D) death anxiety.
Question
When a doctor ends a suffering patient's life without the patient's permission,the doctor is practicing

A) involuntary active euthanasia.
B) assisted suicide.
C) voluntary active euthanasia.
D) passive euthanasia.
Question
Recognition of living wills is

A) essential in cases of potential organ donation.
B) usually limited to the terminally ill or those expected to die shortly.
C) rare except in cases of persistent vegetative states.
D) universal.
Question
Public opinion consistently favors __________ over __________.

A) assisted suicide; passive euthanasia
B) involuntary active euthanasia; assisted suicide
C) voluntary active euthanasia; assisted suicide
D) assisted suicide; voluntary active euthanasia
Question
Which of the following statements about assisted suicide is true?

A) Assisted suicide often occurs without the patient's consent.
B) Assisted suicide is illegal in all U.S. states and Canada.
C) Nearly 60 percent of Americans approve of assisted suicide for terminally ill patients in great pain.
D) Assisted suicide is endorsed by the American Medical Association.
Question
People respond to __________ with __________.

A) bereavement; grief
B) mourning; grief
C) mourning; bereavement
D) morbidity; bereavement
Question
Music is effective in easing the distress of those who are dying

A) but often upsets family members who desire quiet times.
B) because hearing functions longer than other senses.
C) only when it replaces use of pain medications.
D) only when patients are conscious and fully aware.
Question
A recent study showed that music vigils for dying patients result in

A) increased wakefulness.
B) more effortful breathing.
C) reduced anxiety.
D) increased stimulation in the hippocampus.
Question
Hospice care results in

A) less family involvement.
B) greater death anxiety.
C) prolonged life.
D) improved family functioning.
Question
Bereavement is

A) the response to the loss of a loved one.
B) the experience of losing a loved one by death.
C) the culturally specified expression of thoughts and feelings after a death.
D) intense physical and psychological distress.
Question
The durable power of attorney for health care

A) cannot anticipate all future medical conditions and, thus, the living will is more flexible.
B) is illegal in almost all U.S. states because it covers children and adolescents who cannot authorize a legal contract.
C) is only appropriate for those who support passive or voluntary active euthanasia.
D) can ensure a partner's role in decision making and in advocating for the patient's health-care needs.
Question
Health-care proxies

A) can sometimes be appointed when a patient fails to provide an advance medical directive while competent.
B) cannot make medical decisions for patients in persistent vegetative states.
C) are appointed under living wills.
D) are permitted in all U.S. states and Canada.
Question
Which of the following individuals is the most likely to support voluntary active euthanasia?

A) Roger, who is from Great Britain
B) Kate, who is from Australia
C) Tessa, who is from the Netherlands
D) Greg, who is from the United States
Question
At his patient's request,Dr.Feiger administers a legal dose of drugs.Dr.Feiger practices

A) involuntary active euthanasia.
B) assisted suicide.
C) voluntary active euthanasia.
D) passive euthanasia.
Question
At her patient's request,Dr.Yobst withholds or withdraws treatment,permitting the patient to die naturally.Dr.Yobst practices

A) involuntary euthanasia.
B) assisted suicide.
C) voluntary active euthanasia.
D) passive euthanasia.
Question
When doctors engage in voluntary active euthanasia,

A) they enable the patient to take his or her own life.
B) they withhold or withdraw treatment.
C) about 80 percent of the population disapproves.
D) judges are usually lenient, granting suspended sentences or probation.
Question
In a famous case involving assisted suicide,Dr.Jack Kevorkian

A) presented evidence in court that his patient wanted to kill himself.
B) was convicted of second-degree murder.
C) was a vigorous opponent of euthanasia.
D) received probation for helping a patient die.
Question
Voluntary active euthanasia is __________ in __________.

A) illegal; almost all U.S. states
B) legal; most Western European countries
C) legal; Canada and in most U.S. states
D) illegal; all countries
Question
Advance medical directives

A) are not recognized in the United States or Canada.
B) guarantee personal control over the right to die.
C) state in writing the desired end-of-life medical treatment.
D) authorize mercy killing.
Question
Katherine stated in writing that without reasonable expectation of recovery,she should not be kept alive through medical intervention.This document

A) is called a durable power of attorney for health care.
B) is called a living will.
C) creates a health-care proxy.
D) is illegal in almost all U.S. states.
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Deck 19: Death, dying, and Bereavement
1
In most industrialized nations today,doctors rely on __________ to signify death.

A) brain death
B) absence of heartbeat
C) absence of respiration
D) falling body temperature
A
2
Dying people

A) should be thought of as primarily physical beings, requiring care and attention to bodily functions.
B) benefit profoundly in their last days and hours from social support responsive to their needs for emotional and spiritual closure.
C) do not benefit from a focus on the mind or spirit during their last days.
D) should not be troubled with details about the dying process and instead should focus on pain management.
B
3
We can ensure the most dignified exit possible by

A) allowing doctors and nurses to make all of the decisions for the dying person.
B) hiding or minimizing the truth about the diagnosis from the dying person.
C) assuring the dying person that everything will be okay and they will improve.
D) offering the dying person care, affection, companionship, and esteem.
D
4
Which of the following statements about contemporary attitudes toward death is true?

A) Death anxiety-fear and apprehension of death-is widespread.
B) Few people reach adulthood without having experienced the death of someone they know well.
C) When death occurs, people of all ages take care of tasks that involve confronting it directly.
D) Because Americans are exposed to frequent images of death in the media, death anxiety is rare.
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5
Which of the following statements about helping a loved one die a "good death" is true?

A) It is best to talk about the past and avoid discussing the impending death.
B) Loved ones should remember that the dying person needs time alone.
C) It is best to be candid about death's certainty.
D) Loved ones should conceal or minimize their own grief.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Which of the following statements about gender differences in death anxiety is true?

A) In both Eastern and Western cultures, women appear more anxious about death than men do.
B) Men are more likely than women to admit troubled feelings about mortality.
C) Women are more likely than men to admit troubled feelings about mortality.
D) Men are more likely than women to develop a sense of symbolic immortality.
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7
Which of the following individuals will likely experience the lowest level of death anxiety?

A) Marvin, a 93-year-old
B) Santiago, a 51-year-old
C) Joyce, a 35-year-old
D) Josiah, a 17-year-old
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8
Queenie,age 95,sees death as an opportunity to pass a legacy to her grandchildren and their grandchildren.As a result,she does not fear death.Queenie has a sense of

A) symbolic immortality.
B) death anxiety.
C) ego integrity.
D) body transcendence.
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9
The development of a national organ transplant program has been hindered in Japan because

A) the standard of death is brain death.
B) the standard of death is absence of heartbeat and respiration.
C) Japanese law does not allow organ donation.
D) those in a persistent vegetative state are considered dead.
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k this deck
10
In industrialized countries,

A) most people die in the presence of loved ones rather than surrounded by doctors and nurses.
B) people usually die at home where family members attend their last moments.
C) opportunities to witness the physical aspects of death are less available today than in previous generations.
D) most people do not want to know how we die or grasp what is happening to a dying loved one.
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11
Mr.Johnson was in a skiing accident.He suffered traumatic head injuries when he came in contact with a tree.Mr.Johnson's cerebral cortex no longer registers electrical activity,but his brain stem remains active.Mr.Johnson

A) is brain dead.
B) is in the agonal phase of death.
C) has entered a persistent vegetative state.
D) is in the mortality phase of death.
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12
During mortality,

A) the individual's regular heartbeat disintegrates, causing muscle spasms and gasping.
B) resuscitation is still possible.
C) the individual passes into permanent death.
D) the heartbeat, circulation, breathing, and brain functioning stop.
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13
In the days or hours before death,

A) the person becomes very thirsty.
B) skin color becomes reddish.
C) body temperature rises.
D) the hands and feet feel cool.
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14
Dr.Snyder decided to devote her career to the study of death and dying.Dr.Snyder's interdisciplinary field is

A) gerontology.
B) thanatology.
C) geriatrics.
D) anthropology.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
In a study of devout __________,certain factors that appear repeatedly in Westerners' responses to death,such as fear of the body decaying and of the unknown,are absent.

A) Islamic Saudi Arabians
B) Tibetan Buddhists
C) European Roman Catholics
D) Israeli Jews
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Knowing his last days were near,Harrison chose to die at home.He was clear-minded during his final hours,allowing him to review his life and say farewell.Like Harrison,

A) about 20 percent of people experience a gentle death.
B) about 25 percent of people experience a long and drawn-out death.
C) most Americans die at home.
D) most people experience a quick, agony-free death.
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k this deck
17
During the clinical death phase,

A) the individual's regular heartbeat disintegrates, causing muscle spasms and gasping.
B) resuscitation is no longer possible.
C) the individual passes into permanent death.
D) heartbeat, circulation, breathing, and brain functioning stop.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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18
When the transition from life to death is imminent,a person often moves through which of the following three phases?

A) clinical death, mortality, brain death
B) the agonal phase, clinical death, mortality
C) brain death, clinical death, mortality
D) the agonal phase, clinical death, brain death
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19
Death anxiety is especially low among adults

A) who regularly pray and attend services but doubt the existence of an afterlife.
B) who do not believe in a higher force or being.
C) who believe in a rewarding afterlife but rarely pray or attend services.
D) with deep faith in some form of higher force or being.
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Unlock Deck
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20
The greatest dignity in death is in

A) succumbing suddenly.
B) passing without narcotic drug use.
C) overcoming pain without complaint.
D) the integrity of the life that precedes it.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
According to Kübler-Ross,most people who reach a state of peace and quiet about upcoming death do so

A) within the first two months after learning the diagnosis.
B) only in the last weeks or days before death.
C) only in the last hours or minutes before death.
D) after bargaining and before depression.
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22
Family members who __________ can make dying more difficult for a patient.

A) are brutally candid
B) play the denial "game"
C) question medical personnel
D) do not believe in an afterlife
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23
Dying of cancer,Janice promises God that she will devote her life to the church if He lets her live.According to Kübler-Ross,Janice is exhibiting which of the five typical responses to the prospect of death?

A) denial
B) anger
C) bargaining
D) acceptance
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Unlock Deck
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24
According to Kübler-Ross,recognition that time is short promotes

A) denial.
B) depression.
C) anger.
D) acceptance.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Which of the following statements about a dying person's reactions is true?

A) Depression in a dying person does not require treatment.
B) The course of an illness has little effect on the dying person's reactions.
C) About one-third of cancer patients experience severe depression.
D) In depressed terminal patients, life review is associated with earlier death.
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26
When he was dying of cancer,Jesse said,"Whenever I think I cannot stand the pain,I imagine riding my motorcycle along Route 66." Jesse views dying as

A) an experience to be transformed.
B) a mandate to live ever more fully.
C) part of life's journey.
D) imprisonment.
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27
According to Kübler-Ross,when denial,anger,and bargaining fail to postpone the illness,the terminally ill person

A) becomes depressed.
B) accepts death.
C) becomes enraged.
D) disengages from all but a few family members.
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28
Ruth regards death as a mandate to live ever more fully.In discussing her images of dying,Ruth is most likely to say,

A) "In a way, I feel like I'm already dead."
B) "After reading everything I could about my disease, I realized for the first time in my life I can handle anything."
C) "I've looked death in the eye, and now I'm really living."
D) "When I start to think too much about my illness, I recite the lyrics to my favorite songs."
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k this deck
29
According to Kübler-Ross,the terminally ill person who reaches bargaining

A) grasps the inevitability of death.
B) denies the seriousness of the illness.
C) distorts the truth about his or her condition.
D) is despondent.
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30
The most serious drawback to Kübler-Ross's theory is that

A) dying people are unlikely to display denial after learning of their condition because most people trust doctors.
B) it looks at dying patients' thoughts and feelings outside the contexts that give them meaning.
C) a normal dying person goes through the five stages, but not in Kübler-Ross's sequence.
D) it fails to recognize that as dying people move closer to death, their reactions are predictable.
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31
Which of the following is considered to be part of dying a "good death"?

A) clarifying the meaning of one's life and death
B) being pain-free
C) relinquishing control to medical professionals
D) disengaging from loved ones
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32
In diverse cultures,people who are __________ report less death anxiety.

A) religious
B) clinically depressed
C) generally anxious
D) good at emotional self-regulation
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33
Carl is dying.He says,"In a way,I feel like I'm already dead." Carl views dying as

A) part of life's journey.
B) imprisonment.
C) a mandate to live ever more fully.
D) an experience to be transformed.
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34
__________ is associated with poorer survival.

A) Denial
B) Anger
C) Bargaining
D) Depression
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35
Kübler-Ross's five typical responses to the prospect of death

A) should be viewed as a fixed sequence.
B) are universal stages.
C) are applicable to the dying person's family members.
D) are best viewed as coping strategies.
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36
According to Kübler-Ross,a terminally ill person first reacts to the news that he or she is dying

A) by bargaining for extra time.
B) by denying the seriousness of the illness.
C) with anger.
D) with acceptance.
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37
Understanding the way that individuals __________ helps us appreciate the way they manage the dying process.

A) interact with close friends and family members
B) view spirituality and religion
C) view the medical profession
D) have coped with stressful life events in the past
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38
Before her death,Irene contacted her estranged sister and made amends.She took control of the time she had left,and confronted and prepared for death.Her death made sense in terms of her pattern of living and values.Irene experienced a(n)__________ death.

A) fixed
B) appropriate
C) ideal
D) passive
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k this deck
39
According to Kübler-Ross,the underlying cause of a terminal person's anger is

A) death anxiety.
B) the unfairness of death.
C) depression.
D) poor self-regulation.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Helen regards death as part of life's journey.Helen is most likely to say,

A) "I feel like the future has suddenly been taken away."
B) "You're not ready to live until you're ready to die."
C) "When I think too much about my illness, I recite poetry I memorized as a child."
D) "After reading everything I could about my illness, I really believe I can handle anything."
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41
Hospice

A) aims to provide a caring community sensitive to the dying person's needs.
B) provides spiritual and emotional support, but not palliative care.
C) emphasizes rehabilitation rather than high-quality terminal care.
D) death often triggers feelings of anger, frustration, and confusion.
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k this deck
42
Mr.Martinez is dying.Because of their cultural beliefs,his Mexican-American family will probably

A) pretend there is nothing wrong in an attempt to prevent unnecessary stress.
B) forbid the doctors to talk to him about his condition because it will bring bad fortune to the family.
C) avoid informing him of his condition because they believe doing so hastens death.
D) talk openly and honestly about his condition, so that he can focus on resolving family conflicts before he dies.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Most American deaths take place

A) at home.
B) in nursing homes.
C) in long-term care facilities.
D) in hospitals.
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k this deck
44
Dying patients who feel they have much unfinished business to attend to are

A) less likely to bargain.
B) more likely to reach acceptance.
C) unlikely to disengage from family members.
D) more anxious about impending death.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Dying in intensive care

A) is especially depersonalizing.
B) requires family intervention.
C) is viewed by many as ideal.
D) less stressful for the patient than dying at home.
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k this deck
46
As they move through a hope trajectory,many dying patients first hope for

A) a cure.
B) prolonging life.
C) strength.
D) a peaceful death.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Ten months after a __________ death,family members continue to report more psychological stress than do family members whose loved one died elsewhere.

A) home
B) hospice
C) hospital
D) nursing home
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Unlock Deck
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48
Which of the following ethnic groups does not believe in telling terminally ill patients about their condition partly because dying disrupts important interdependent relationships?

A) Irish
B) French
C) Middle Eastern
D) Japanese
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49
Crisis intervention services are needed to help survivors cope with

A) a home death.
B) sudden death.
C) prolonged death.
D) a nursing home death.
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k this deck
50
When Maea lay dying,relatives and friends gathered around him to give spiritual strength and comfort.Older adults and other experts conducted a karakia ceremony,reciting prayers asking for peace,mercy,and guidance from the creator.Maea is most likely a(n)

A) African American.
B) member of the Maori tribe.
C) Native American.
D) Buddhist.
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51
For many African Americans,

A) death is met with stoic self-control.
B) a dying loved one signals a crisis that unites family members in caregiving.
C) dying leads to Nirvana, a state beyond the world of suffering.
D) calming the dying person by reading sutras in key to caregiving.
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52
Pat's relatives read sutras to him to calm his mind and emphasize that dying leads to rebirth in a heaven of peace and relaxation.Pat is most likely a(n)

A) African American.
B) Native American.
C) Buddhist.
D) member of the Maori tribe.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
Few U.S.doctors are specially trained in

A) handling patients with AIDS.
B) managing pain in chronically ill and dying people.
C) gerontology.
D) thanatology.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
Once patients near death stop expressing hope,

A) those close to them must accept this.
B) death is imminent.
C) they have reached a state of denial
D) they will not reach acceptance.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Which of the following statements about hospice care is true?

A) Staff has little time for contact with family members.
B) Hospice programs do not typically provide respite care.
C) Follow-up bereavement services are not typically offered to families.
D) Hospice programs encompass a continuum of care, from home to inpatient options.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
__________ care relieves pain and other symptoms rather than prolonging life.

A) Hospital
B) Palliative
C) Intensive
D) Skilled
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
Nursing home

A) care emphasizes pain management and the resident's end-of-life preferences.
B) death is especially depersonalizing for patients and family members.
C) care emphasizes rehabilitation rather than high-quality terminal care.
D) care is aimed at easing physical, emotional, and spiritual suffering at death.
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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58
In many Native American groups,

A) death is met with stoic self-control.
B) dying people believe that it is possible to reach a state beyond the world of suffering.
C) an illness is viewed as a crisis that unites family members.
D) a karakia ceremony is conducted to ask the creator for peace.
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Unlock Deck
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59
Reggie is a 74-year-old hospice patient.Reggie will most likely die in

A) his own home or a homelike setting.
B) a hospice inpatient unit.
C) a nursing home.
D) a typical hospital room.
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60
To make dying at home feasible,__________ is essential.

A) hospice care
B) adequate support for the caregiver
C) trained nursing support
D) the presence of medical personnel
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61
After his father died,Jonah felt nauseous,was profoundly sad,and could not sleep,yet felt exhausted.Jonah's physical and psychological distress is known as

A) bereavement.
B) grief.
C) mourning.
D) death anxiety.
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62
When a doctor ends a suffering patient's life without the patient's permission,the doctor is practicing

A) involuntary active euthanasia.
B) assisted suicide.
C) voluntary active euthanasia.
D) passive euthanasia.
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k this deck
63
Recognition of living wills is

A) essential in cases of potential organ donation.
B) usually limited to the terminally ill or those expected to die shortly.
C) rare except in cases of persistent vegetative states.
D) universal.
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Unlock Deck
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64
Public opinion consistently favors __________ over __________.

A) assisted suicide; passive euthanasia
B) involuntary active euthanasia; assisted suicide
C) voluntary active euthanasia; assisted suicide
D) assisted suicide; voluntary active euthanasia
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Unlock for access to all 110 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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65
Which of the following statements about assisted suicide is true?

A) Assisted suicide often occurs without the patient's consent.
B) Assisted suicide is illegal in all U.S. states and Canada.
C) Nearly 60 percent of Americans approve of assisted suicide for terminally ill patients in great pain.
D) Assisted suicide is endorsed by the American Medical Association.
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66
People respond to __________ with __________.

A) bereavement; grief
B) mourning; grief
C) mourning; bereavement
D) morbidity; bereavement
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Unlock Deck
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67
Music is effective in easing the distress of those who are dying

A) but often upsets family members who desire quiet times.
B) because hearing functions longer than other senses.
C) only when it replaces use of pain medications.
D) only when patients are conscious and fully aware.
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68
A recent study showed that music vigils for dying patients result in

A) increased wakefulness.
B) more effortful breathing.
C) reduced anxiety.
D) increased stimulation in the hippocampus.
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69
Hospice care results in

A) less family involvement.
B) greater death anxiety.
C) prolonged life.
D) improved family functioning.
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70
Bereavement is

A) the response to the loss of a loved one.
B) the experience of losing a loved one by death.
C) the culturally specified expression of thoughts and feelings after a death.
D) intense physical and psychological distress.
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71
The durable power of attorney for health care

A) cannot anticipate all future medical conditions and, thus, the living will is more flexible.
B) is illegal in almost all U.S. states because it covers children and adolescents who cannot authorize a legal contract.
C) is only appropriate for those who support passive or voluntary active euthanasia.
D) can ensure a partner's role in decision making and in advocating for the patient's health-care needs.
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72
Health-care proxies

A) can sometimes be appointed when a patient fails to provide an advance medical directive while competent.
B) cannot make medical decisions for patients in persistent vegetative states.
C) are appointed under living wills.
D) are permitted in all U.S. states and Canada.
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Unlock Deck
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73
Which of the following individuals is the most likely to support voluntary active euthanasia?

A) Roger, who is from Great Britain
B) Kate, who is from Australia
C) Tessa, who is from the Netherlands
D) Greg, who is from the United States
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74
At his patient's request,Dr.Feiger administers a legal dose of drugs.Dr.Feiger practices

A) involuntary active euthanasia.
B) assisted suicide.
C) voluntary active euthanasia.
D) passive euthanasia.
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75
At her patient's request,Dr.Yobst withholds or withdraws treatment,permitting the patient to die naturally.Dr.Yobst practices

A) involuntary euthanasia.
B) assisted suicide.
C) voluntary active euthanasia.
D) passive euthanasia.
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76
When doctors engage in voluntary active euthanasia,

A) they enable the patient to take his or her own life.
B) they withhold or withdraw treatment.
C) about 80 percent of the population disapproves.
D) judges are usually lenient, granting suspended sentences or probation.
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77
In a famous case involving assisted suicide,Dr.Jack Kevorkian

A) presented evidence in court that his patient wanted to kill himself.
B) was convicted of second-degree murder.
C) was a vigorous opponent of euthanasia.
D) received probation for helping a patient die.
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78
Voluntary active euthanasia is __________ in __________.

A) illegal; almost all U.S. states
B) legal; most Western European countries
C) legal; Canada and in most U.S. states
D) illegal; all countries
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79
Advance medical directives

A) are not recognized in the United States or Canada.
B) guarantee personal control over the right to die.
C) state in writing the desired end-of-life medical treatment.
D) authorize mercy killing.
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80
Katherine stated in writing that without reasonable expectation of recovery,she should not be kept alive through medical intervention.This document

A) is called a durable power of attorney for health care.
B) is called a living will.
C) creates a health-care proxy.
D) is illegal in almost all U.S. states.
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