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16 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

What are peoples’ response to illness? Common experiences include behavioral and ? changes, changes in ?, and ? family dynamics.

emotional
roles
disturbed
Illness creates a variety of ? responses, guilt, anger, anxiety and stress are common.
emotional
individuals may experience ? about becoming ill, particularly if the illness is related to lifestyle choices, such as smoking.
guilt
- When patients must make sacrifices to manage their illnesses, such as giving up favorite foods or activities, they may experience ? about the changes.
anger
Anxiety is an ill-defined, diffuse feeling of ? and ?
apprehension
uncertainty
? occurs as a result of some threat to and individual’s selfhood, self-esteem, or identity
Anxiety
? is both a response to illness and an important factor in the development of illness.
Stress
Some control can be exerted over the number and types of ? encountered, and responses can often be managed.
stressors
? is a response to a real or perceived threat to the individual, where as ? is an interaction between the individual and the environment.
Anxiety

Stress
Stress includes all the responses the body makes while striving to maintain ? and deal with demands.
equilibrium
? came up with a theory for cultural care for nursing.
Leininger
? nursing involves planning nursing care based on knowledge that is culturally defined, classified, and tested.
Culturally congruent
Nurses who use Leininger’s theory of ? in their practices view patients in the context of their cultures.
cultural care
Practice from a cultural perspective begins by? the culture of the patient and recognizing the importance of its relationship to nursing care.
respecting
The nursing outcome of culturally congruent nursing care is ? and ? for the patient.
health
well-being
Use of the ? model guides the assessment of cultural data for an understanding of its influence on the patient’s life.
sunrise