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39 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
a sense that things are out of control. an occurence that exceeds person's normal coping ability
crisis
a general belief that people can control their own destiny
internal locus of control
a sense that things are comfortable, predictable, and familar
normalcy
change what can be changed (problem solving), adjust to what cannot be changed (emotional adjustment)
coping
a general belief that things are controlled by outside forces; people believe in fate or God's Will
external locus of control
intstrumental support; perform tasks and functions, informational support provide information
action facilitating support
people helping people in crisis ; behaviors that communicate to individual that she or he is valued and cared for by others
social support
esteem support, emotional, social network support
nurturing support
non professionals who provide care for others ( familes, friends, churches)
lay caregivers
people who provide care for both their parents and their children
sandwich generation
as excessive and unneccesary help; providing too much instrumetnal help
over supporting
refers to the ability show that someone can understand how others are feelings
over empathizing
life at all costs and death with dignity
perspectives on death
refers to the situation where the advancement of a qualified person is stopped because some form of discrimination
glass ceiling
occurs when a person wishes to meet multiple objectives but meeting one objective means sacrificing another
conflict of interest
nurses are often in a difficult situation they need to protect patients interests and they have to foolow doctors or supervisors instructions
role conflicts
health could be understood by physical indicators and medical research; healthy == absence of diseases
organic perspective
heatlth refers to a state of complete physical, social, mental, and social well being
harmony perspective
health care providers insist that people conform to mainstream cultural standards. they have no interests in learning about diverse types of people
resistant care
health care providers offer respectful care to all individual. they might not be interested in learnign about different cultures, but they try to accommodate patients preferences
generalist care
heath care providers show high commitment to learn about other cultures and honoring diverse ways of thinking and behaving
impassioned care
a relatively enduring set of characteristics that define a person
personal identity
perceived membership in societal groups (student, professor, farmer, salesman, manager, doctor, nurse)
social identity
a label that simultaneously defines the illness and one's alignment toward it (cancer survivor)
tertiary identity
people use story telling to establish common values and interpretation
narrative theory
health is alignment between interpretive accounts, performance, self-image
integrative health theory
refers to physical and psychological response to overwhelming stimuli. major cause of burnout
stress
no motivation or compassion
emotional exhaustion; type of burnout
tendency to treat people in an unfeeling impersonal way
depersonalization
reduced sense of personal accomplishment
failure
the process of communciating across distances for health related purpose
telemedicine
establishes patients and caregivers as peers who openly discuss health options and make mutally satisfying decisions
collaborative communication
patients are usually most concered with how they feel and how their health affects their regular activities
voice of lifeworld
diseases are not necessarily negative or undesirable. Instead they are integral parts of life that provide opportunities for growth and change
theory of health as expanded consciousness
illness cant stop them from being better than ever
supernormal identity
not quite as optimistic, but deny that illness has changed them
restored self
start to admit that they may not be able to do everything they could previously do
contingent personal identity
integrates former "self" with current limitations
salvaged self
a sense of caring about other people without becoming emotionally involved in the process
detached concern