ATI LPN
Shadow Health Patient Comfort Questions Questions
Question 1 of 5
When recording care-related data, all of the following are correct except:
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Erasing or whiting out errors is incorrect because it compromises the integrity of medical records, which must remain accurate and tamper-proof for legal and care continuity purposes. Using ink ensures permanence, legible writing aids clarity, and including time, date, and initials tracks accountability standard practices for PSWs. Altering records by erasure risks miscommunication or errors in client care, like missing a medication dose, and could violate regulations. PSWs must instead strike through mistakes with a single line, initial, and correct them visibly, preserving transparency. This distinction is critical in training, as accurate documentation supports client safety, team coordination, and legal defensibility, unlike erasable methods that obscure the care history.
Question 2 of 5
In a community setting, who usually assesses, monitors, and evaluates the client's needs and coordinates the services of the health care team?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The case manager typically coordinates community care, assessing and monitoring needs, unlike physicians (A, treatment-focused), therapists (C, rehab), or social workers (D, support). PSWs report to them e.g., on ADL changes ensuring integrated services. Misidentifying this risks disjointed care; case managers unify efforts. Their role streamlines PSW tasks, aligning resources to client needs, a critical link in community health teamwork.
Question 3 of 5
A caregiver is responsible for the moral and legal requirements of proper patient care. This means that the caregiver is:
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Accountable means caregivers answer morally and legally for care, unlike licensed (B, credentialed), employed (C, status), or regulated (D, governed). PSWs are accountable e.g., reporting errors ensuring ethical, safe practice. Misnaming it risks shirking duty; accountability drives diligence over mere employment. For instance, owning a mistake like a missed bath upholds trust, a core PSW trait. This responsibility ensures client welfare and legal compliance, distinguishing their role from passive job status, vital for professionalism in daily care.
Question 4 of 5
Temporary care of a person with a serious illness or disability that gives the regular care-giver a break from their duties is:
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Respite care relieves regular caregivers temporarily, unlike chronic (B, ongoing), acute (C, short-term), or palliation (D, end-of-life). PSWs provide this e.g., aiding a family supporting sustainability. Mislabeling risks misapplied care; respite is relief-focused. This role eases caregiver burden, a PSW contribution to family well-being, distinct from treatment types, per their community scope.
Question 5 of 5
Detailed rules that describe how requirements are met under legislations are:
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Regulations detail legislative rules e.g., care standards unlike authorities (A, bodies), self-determination (C, autonomy), or torts (D, wrongs). PSWs follow these e.g., documentation for compliance. Misnaming risks legal errors; regulations guide. This knowledge ensures PSWs meet mandates, a structural backbone in their regulated practice.