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Q:
Which of the following is not a PHR concern?
1. Insurance claims
2. Privacy
3. Portability
4. Accuracy of data
Q:
As PHRs become the established norm, health care providers are aware of issues that can emerge from patient self-disclosure. Which of the following is a key concern associated with the patient-self entered data?
1. Electronic medication refills
2. Automated appointment schedules
3. Data review responsibility
4. Downloading accurate data
Q:
Patients bring a wide variation in their capacity to use information technology. Which of the following does not increase the usability of PHRs?
1. Easy navigation
2. Simple functionality
3. Decreased e-literacy
4. Readability
Q:
Which of the following is a barrier associated with patient use of PHRs in rural regions?
1. Access
2. Awareness
3. Usability
4. eHealth literacy
Q:
Which of the following are considered disadvantages of the PHR?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. E-literacy
2. Lack of access in poor and rural regions
3. Patient satisfaction
4. Cost
5. Enhanced therapeutic alliances
Q:
The largest health system to deploy a PHR in the United States is __________________:
Q:
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center was one of the early adopters of PHRs. Which type of PHRs are used throughout the system?
1. Stand alone
2. Tethered
3. Integrated
4. Integrated alone
Q:
Which of the following health systems was an early pioneer adopting the PHR?
1. Tenet Health System
2. Jefferson Medical System
3. Nationwide Health Care System
4. Palo Alto Medical Foundation
Q:
Which of the following are considered patient benefits of EHR personal health information?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Self-entered data
2. Appointment request
3. Medication management
4. Appointment views
5. Access to test results
Q:
PHRs can enhance a health care provider's clinical practice in a number of ways. Which of the following are associated with the benefits of the PHR and medication management?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Allows patients to check and improve quality of medication list (medication reconciliation)
2. Encourages discussion with doctor to improve adherence
3. Patient can share medication information with other providers
4. Health care provider can access information on prescription refills
5. Allows the health care provider and patient immediate communication with pharmacy
Q:
PHRs and their functions are becoming more important in health care delivery systems. There are a multitude of benefits associated with the PHR. Which of the following is not a potential benefit associated with the PHR and laboratory tests?
1. May confuse and worry patients
2. Avoids letters and phone calls
3. Reduces patient waiting time
4. All data are confidential
Q:
In its simplest form, the PHR is a stand alone system where the _______________enters data.
Q:
Some functionalities require integration between the PHR and a scheduling application. Which of the following is a benefit of this communication?
1. Integration between a scheduling application and the PHR allows the patient to locate a physician's practice in a new region.
2. Integration between a scheduling application and the PHR allows the patient to have instant access with a health care provider's staff.
3. Integration between a scheduling application and the PHR allows the patient to schedule an appointment without making a telephone call.
4. Integration between a scheduling application and the PHR allows the patient to send notes and updates to the health care provider's office.
Q:
Which of the following functionalities can be found with the personal health record (PHR)?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Entering medical history
2. Entering allergies
3. Entering present medication alerts
4. Entering past social history
5. Entering family history
Q:
________________________ PHRs are extensions of physicians' offices.
Q:
Which of the following best defines a tethered PHR?
1. A tethered PHR is inextricably linked to a single entity or health system.
2. A tethered system is a stand alone system.
3. A tethered system can be found on a thumb drive.
4. A tethered system cannot access a patient portal.
Q:
Which of the following are characteristics of stand-alone PHRs?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Patient accessible information is tethered to data in a specific health system's EHR.
2. Some fully standalone applications are available commercially.
3. The PHR is not tied to any particular health care system.
4. Some fully standalone applications are available in formats such as smart card, CD, or flash drive.
5. Standalone PHRs such as those on thumb drive devices have been found to have significant security risks.
Q:
The PHR is considered a ________________________ lifetime health record.
Q:
Markle's Common Framework offers valuable guidance for the development and deployment of patient-centered PHRs. The Framework identifies seven attributes of an ideal PHR. Which of the following are considered attributes of the Common Framework?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. PHRs permit easy exchange of information across health care systems.
2. PHRs contain information from one's entire lifetime.
3. PHRs contain information from all health care providers.
4. PHRs are accessible from any place at any time.
5. PHRs are private and secure.
Q:
Which of the following is considered a core personal health record element?
1. Data accessed by IT
2. Analysis of data
3. Applicability of data
4. Information inputted by the patient
Q:
What is a private, secure application through which an individual may access, manage, and share his or her health information?
1. Personal health record
2. Clinical data network
3. Best practice model
4. Online scheduling database
Q:
___________________________ facilitates the monitoring of trends and problems of the health of populations, developing clinical decision support, and expanding our knowledge of diseases and treatments and outcomes through research and clinical data mining.
Q:
Multiple benefits have emerged from the use of structured terminologies within health care records. Which of the following are considered benefits of the health information technology (HIT)?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Accurate, consistent meaning of data is collected and shared across the health care system.
2. A plethora of data can be entered into the system manually.
3. Clinical terminology enables the capture of data at the level of detail necessary for patient care documentation.
4. Standardization in nursing documentation supports research across settings on patient outcomes and interoperability.
5. Patient identification and outcomes are clearly shared throughout the systems.
Q:
Implementing standardized terminology has many benefits to multiple beneficiaries. Which of the following are benefits of standardized terminology?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Patients
2. Providers
3. Health care organizations
4. Health care industry
5. Informational technicians
Q:
In the last decade, and with the requirement to build EHRs that meet the 2009 meaningful use criteria, the use of which type of data has expanded to include pay-for-performance initiatives, care coordination, patient safety monitoring, and public health surveillance?
1. Patient
2. Coded
3. Embedded
4. Qualitative
Q:
Meaningful use requirements mandate the use of _________________________ for data collection and reporting of established quality measures.
Q:
The impact of standardized terminology throughout the U.S. health care system has grown exponentially. Medicare and Medicaid have begun to offer financial incentives to health care providers to promote adoption and meaningful use of interoperable health information systems and a qualified health record. Which of the following statements best describes meaningful use?
1. The goal of meaningful use is to input data in a manner that creates evidence-based practice models.
2. The goal of meaningful use is to exchange clinical structured data in a manner that is accurate and complete to improve patient care in a cost-efficient way.
3. The goal of meaningful use is to provide a warehouse of data that supports medication renewal and patient teaching plans.
4. The goal of meaningful use is to offer the clinician patient care tools for improved outcomes.
Q:
Standard terminologies have been scientifically investigated for their effectiveness and impact on patient care. The use of standard terminologies can, therefore, facilitate the use of which of the following?
1. Multiple support languages
2. Consumer informatics
3. Computer literacy
4. Evidence-based practice and decision support rules
Q:
The use of SNOMED CT within electronic health records has multiple benefits. Which of the following are considered benefits of SNOMED CT?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Provides interoperable data collection that can be analyzed and used for evidence-based practice models
2. Provides interoperable data collection that can be analyzed and used for decision support rules
3. Provides interoperable data collection that can be analyzed and used in reporting quality measures
4. Provides interoperable data collection that can be analyzed and used for medication renewals
5. Provides interoperable data collection that can be analyzed and used for administrative billing
Q:
The Omaha System has a multitude of functions. The system can store data describing problems, symptoms, modifiers, interventions, and outcomes. One of the benefits of the stored data is which of the following?
1. Decreasing services to elderly
2. Allowing patient input of data
3. Researching quality and effectiveness
4. Decreasing time spent with data collection
Q:
A classification system is used to categorize the details of the clinical encounter. Which of the following does a classification system not do?
1. Group data to determine costs and outcomes of treatment
2. Captures the level of detail necessary to document specific items at the point of care
3. Provides data to consumers on costs and outcomes of treatment options
4. Used in the collection and reporting of health statistics
Q:
Clinical terminologies consist of concepts that support which of the following facets of health care?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Diagnostic studies
2. History and physical examinations
3. Visit notes
4. Ancillary department information
5. Outcomes measures
Q:
Mr. Gonzalez is scheduled to undergo a hip replacement after he slipped on an icy step. During the preoperative phase, the nurse begins to enter the assessment findings into the database. Which of the following standardized terminologies will the nurse most likely use?
1. The Omaha System
2. The PeriOperative Nursing Data Set (PNDS)
3. North American Nursing Diagnosis International (NANDA-I)
4. International Classification of Nursing Practice (ICNP)
Q:
Which of the following answers depicts the use of the ANA recognized nursing classifications to codify data?
1. The ANA recognized nursing classifications codify data used during the nursing process such as assessments, nurse sensitive problems, interventions, and outcomes.
2. The ANA recognized nursing classifications codify data is used to support input devices.
3. The ANA recognized nursing classifications align nursing outcomes.
4. The ANA recognized nursing classifications codify data for retrieval of billing invoices.
Q:
_______________________________________ is standardized classification of interventions that describes the activities that nurses perform.
Q:
Which of the following can be used to document the elements of the nursing process within the care plan?
1. The Omaha System
2. The PeriOperative Nursing Data Set
3. Personal health record
4. NANDA-I
Q:
During the orientation to the renal oncology unit, the head nurse demonstrated the usefulness of the Clinical Care Classification (CCC) System. Throughout the demonstration, the head nurse discussed the value of the system to patient care. Which of the following statements best reflects the usefulness of CCC?
1. The Clinical Care Classification (CCC) System facilitates the collection and dissemination of lab values.
2. The Clinical Care Classification (CCC) System offers improved outcomes.
3. The Clinical Care Classification (CCC) System facilitates patient care documentation at the bedside.
4. The Clinical Care Classification (CCC) System discloses standardized nursing terminologies.
Q:
The ANA has recognized the Omaha System and integrated the terminology into SNOMED CT. Which of the following best represents the value of the Omaha System?
1. The Omaha System is a problem classification scheme.
2. The Omaha System offers outcome labels.
3. The Omaha System provides nursing diagnoses.
4. The Omaha System provides diagnoses and intervention.
Q:
______________________________ is a globally recognized controlled health care vocabulary that provides a common language for electronic health applications.
Q:
Terminologies can be incorporated within the electronic health record (EHR) thereby improving practice. Which of the following are considered uses for this technology in health care?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Classification
2. Reference
3. Point of care
4. Coding
5. Denial of claims
Q:
Which of the following is a nursing classification designed to document the six steps of the nursing process across the care continuum?
1. International Classification of Nursing Practice (ICNP)
2. NANDA International Nursing Diagnoses
3. NANDA-I Taxonomy II
4. Clinical Care Classification (CCC) System
Q:
Which of the following terminologies have been approved by the American Nurses Association?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Nursing Management Minimum Data Set (NMMDS)
2. Nursing Minimum Data Set (NMDS)
3. Alternative Billing Codes (ABC Codes)
4. Clinical Care Classification (CCC)
5. North American Nursing Diagnosis International (NANDA-I)
Q:
The American Nurses Association established criteria for recognizing standardized terminologies. The terminologies must meet established criteria to be approved. Which of the following are instrumental in the approval process?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Outcome identification
2. Diagnosis
3. Problem solving
4. Decision making
5. Nursing process data elements
Q:
The use of standardized nursing terminology will result in better ______________________ among the interdisciplinary team.
Q:
The use of which of the following is a means of ensuring the data collection is accurate and valid?
1. Standardized terminology
2. Tablets
3. Bar coding
4. Handheld devices
Q:
Which of the following terms is defined as structured and controlled languages that have been developed according to terminology development guidelines?
1. Standardized terminologies
2. Health care standards
3. Health care terminology
4. Health information standards
Q:
Information in the electronic health record (EHR) may be owned by the patient or stakeholder. Which of the following about the EHR is different than the electronic medical record (EMR)?
1. It does not provide interactive client access.
2. Clients may append information if desired.
3. Dental records components are not included.
4. The EHR records and manages only episodic information.
Q:
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services indicated that the ________________ is a digital collection of patient's medical history.
Q:
While most hospitals have some level of automation, few have attained a fully electronic environment. Health care Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) analytics created an EMR adoption model that identifies eight levels of EMR capabilities. Your hospital has been designated as a Stage 3 facility. Which of the following is accurate about an organization at Stage 3 level?
1. Computerized provider order entry (CPOE) and better EBP clinical decision support is available.
2. Some clinical automation exists.
3. Basic clinical documentation is required.
4. Major ancillary clinical systems are all installed (laboratory, pharmacy, and radiology systems).
Q:
Which of the following topics must be addressed when giving a presentation to physicians on the benefits of the electronic medical record (EMR)?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Easier access to previous documented encounters
2. Facilitation of clinical pathways
3. Chart access speed
4. Trends and graphics are not available on demand
5. Reduced liabilities through accurate documentation
Q:
A hospital client sees the nurse documenting information into the computer. She asks the nurse why the computer is better than the "old patient chart like hospitals have always used." Which of the following points would be accurate to say about an electronic medical record?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. It captures the information needed for billing purposes.
2. It is more secure than a paper record.
3. More than one person can access the record at any given time.
4. The record is available when and where needed.
5. Data are in real-time, as things happen.
Q:
Which of the following are considered impediments to a fully functional electronic health record (EHR) system?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Development of an electronic infrastructure
2. Cost
3. Common vocabulary
4. Caregiver compliance
5. Privacy
Q:
The goals of implementing the EHR in all health care systems are fraught with a number of roadblocks. The largest barrier facing most institutions is which of the following?
1. The lack of fully trained professional staff
2. A technology committee that cannot agree on the institution's needs
3. Indecision regarding the choice of vendors
4. Cost
Q:
_________________________ would permit the uniform capture of data required to build a longitudinal record comprised of integrated information systems from multiple vendors.
Q:
The relationship between meaningful use and the adoption of the EHR in hospitals, physician offices, and other settings is best described as which of the following?
1. The meaningful use requirement must be considered before beginning the development process.
2. The meaningful use requirement is achieved with the adoption and use of the EHR system as part of the daily routine.
3. The meaningful use requirement is unique to every health care provider.
4. The meaningful use requirement and use of EHR systems are unrelated.
Q:
Which of the following best describes the electronic medical record (EMR)?
1. Legal record created in hospitals
2. Legal record created by vendors
3. An electronic stand alone database
4. Method to identify outcomes
Q:
The computer-based patient record (CPR) is a comprehensive lifetime record that includes all information from all specialties. Most of the data included in the CPR is which of the following?
1. Structured data
2. Unstructured data
3. Fragmented data
4. Complete data
Q:
Which of the following statements about meaningful use is correct?
1. Meaningful use will provide invaluable information that will define the numbers of staff members needed at the bedside.
2. Meaningful use will provide invaluable information that will improve patient outcomes and population health changing many current practices as we transform our health care delivery system.
3. Meaningful use is an ongoing process and not an issue associated with the EHR.
4. Meaningful use is an issue that must be addressed before implementing any upgrade.
Q:
The mere implementation of an electronic medical record (EMR) does not guarantee that benefits will be achieved. Which of the following can affect data integrity?
1. System failure
2. Data analysis
3. Data downloading
4. Data mining
Q:
Electronic medical record (EMR) result reporting and data repository components include unstructured data. Which of the following are examples of unstructured data?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Automated laboratory results
2. History and physical
3. Consultation findings
4. Magnetic resonance imaging
5. A social services text report
Q:
The electronic health record (EHR) has the potential to integrate all pertinent patient information into one record. It also has potential to improve the quality of health information, patient safety, and productivity, contain costs, support research, decrease wait time for treatment and contribute to the body of health care knowledge. Which of the following are reasons why traditional paper records on clients no longer meet the needs of today's health care industry?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Paper records are episode-oriented with a separate record for each client visit.
2. Key information may be lost from one episode to the next, jeopardizing patient safety.
3. Only one person can access a paper record at any given time.
4. Different versions of the same information may be stored in several places.
5. Paper records cannot incorporate diagnostic studies that include images and sound.
Q:
The EHR offers benefits to nurses, physicians, and other health care providers, the health care enterprise, and most importantly, the consumer. Much must be done before the benefits associated with the EHR can be realized. Which of the following is one action that has been proposed by experts?
1. Health care professionals should institute major changes in the way they work.
2. Consumers need education to choose providers based upon appropriate financial and insurance considerations.
3. Individual consumers should have lesser responsibility for data.
4. Government intervention should promote information exchange among software vendors and health care systems.
Q:
Personal health record (PHR) security issues relate to HIPAA and physical security of data. HIPAA only covers PHRs provided by covered entities such as health plans, health care clearinghouses, and providers. No governmental coverage exists for other sites unless it is at the state level. To avoid these types of breaches, the American Health Information Community's consumer empowerment working group made a recommendation. Which of the following was recommended for PHRs in order to avoid breaches?
1. Deletion of sensitive data
2. Educating the general consumer about PHRs
3. Restricting the number of authorized users
4. A PHR certification process
Q:
Which of the following are found with the electronic health record (EHR) but are not found with the computer-based patient record (CPR)?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Evidence-based decision support
2. Assists with the work of planning and delivering evidence-based care
3. Quality management
4. Public health disease surveillance and reporting
5. Comprehensive lifetime record that includes all information from all specialties
Q:
An emerging technology related to electronic health record (EHR) progress is the use of the personal health record (PHR). PHRs store client information that will eventually contribute to the development of a comprehensive, longitudinal record. Which of the following are found in a PHR but not found in the EHR?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Periodic risk assessment survey results
2. Herbal supplements
3. Legal documentation created in a hospital
4. Decision support
5. Health status parameters such as exercise
Q:
The computer-based patient record (CPR) is a comprehensive lifetime record that includes all information from all specialties. The Institute of Medicine (IOM) identified major components of the CPR that are considered to be the "gold standard" attributes. Which of the following are CPR components?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Lack of confidentiality
2. Direct entry for physicians will be available
3. Tools cannot measure cost
4. Provides sporadic access to data
5. Provides a patient problem list
Q:
Unlike other health records the _____________________is patient-centered, presenting a more-balanced view of an individual's health history.
Q:
Consumers are the primary source of information about their health history and medications. The patient-carried record (PCR) addresses this. Which of the following are potential problems associated with the PCR?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Loss of the record
2. Legibility
3. Portability
4. Privacy
5. Liability
Q:
Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) has defined and described the term electronic Personal Health Record (ePHR). Which of the following are included in the HIMSS definition and description?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Universally accessible
2. Owned and managed by the individual (or legal proxy)
3. Usually considered a legal record
4. Common data set of electronic health information
5. Lifelong tool for managing relevant health information
Q:
Which of the following statements is true about the benefits of the electronic health record (EHR)?
1. It improves the quality of health care.
2. Health care executives have developed strong organizational structures around the EHR.
3. The EHR fosters continuity of health care.
4. Little scientific evidence now exists on what benefits are actually delivered.
Q:
Which of the following are major impediments to the development of an electronic health record (EHR)?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Development of an electronic infrastructure
2. Confidentiality
3. Cost
4. Lack of a common vocabulary
5. Information system vendors
Q:
The Bush administration called for the adoption of the electronic health record (EHR) by 2014 as a means to help transform U.S. health care. Who owns the individual client record when an EHR is used?
1. The client
2. Ownership is unclear
3. The institution at which the record is created
4. The health care providers who enter the data
Q:
Which of the following is a major component of the computer-based patient record (CPR)?
1. Results reporting including unstructured data reports
2. Legal record created in hospitals and ambulatory environments
3. Support for links to local or remote information resources
4. Integration of all pertinent patient information into one record
Q:
For many years the EMR applied to a single encounter with no ability, or very limited ability, to carry information from one visit to another within a care delivery system. That situation has changed; it is now possible to bring information forward from prior visits within the organization or delivery system. Which of the following answers are basic components of the EMR system?
Standard Text: Select all that apply.
1. Clinical messaging and e-mail
2. Results reporting
3. Decision support
4. Clinical documentation
5. Order entry
Q:
____________________ and Internet technology were seen as a means to provide access to data from disparate information systems.
Q:
Nurses must be involved in identifying and defining data elements that an interface may be able to supply. One way to ensure participation is to recruit staff nurses to do which of the following?
1. Provide input during the interface design.
2. Be a member of the technology committee
3. Participate in the creation of a RFP.
4. Define language needed for interoperability.
Q:
What uses archetypes (clinical models of content and process) as a means of exchanging clinical documents between systems?
1. Service oriented architecture
2. HL7
3. Open EHR
4. Semantic interoperability
Q:
What is a computer program that tells two different systems how to exchange data?
1. An interface
2. Request for proposal
3. Syntactic operability
4. HL7
Q:
Using what kind of strategy will permit data exchange within each hospital and across health care networks or enterprises?
1. Integration
2. Syntactic interoperability
3. Semantic interoperability
4. Using a clinical data repository
Q:
The lack of which of the following has long been a barrier to effective data reporting and analysis?
1. Knowledge
2. Interoperability
3. Resources
4. Information technology