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Jugar Test
1. 
Research by nurses contributes to:
A.
Evidence based practice
B.
Better marketing for hospitals
C.
Nursing informatics
D.
Healthcare documentaries
2. 
Which of the following is a sphere of practice in nursing
A.
Leadership and management
B.
Palliative Care
C.
Health promotion
D.
Primary care and community services
3. 
Magnet recognition is received for:
A.
Lowering medication errors
B.
Attracting more patients
C.
Nursing excellence and high-quality patient care
D.
Reducing hospital running costs
4. 
How many forces of magnetism are part of the magnet designation?
A.
6
B.
12
C.
14
D.
26
5. 
Magnet Recognition is:
A.
An award for nursing excellence
B.
A credential of nursing excellence
C.
A prize for nursing excellence
D.
A measure of nursing excellence
6. 
A condition that helps define a ‘Context of Practice’ would be:
A.
Working day or night shifts
B.
Roster patterns
C.
Supervising others practice
D.
Characteristics of patients or clients
7. 
When considering the Australian Healthcare Services. Which of the following best describes Health Promotion and disease prevention:
A.
Inpatients and outpatients, immunization, better health campaigns
B.
Immunisation, screening, better health campaigns
C.
Screening, Aged care, better health campaigns
D.
GP screens, immunization, better health campaigns
8. 
The Australian College of Nursing is:
A.
A group that does not have student nurse membership
B.
A union group for nurses
C.
A university teaching nursing
D.
A peak professional body for nurses
9. 
Which of the following statements are MOST true?
A.
Workplace culture is based on individual values, behaviours, goals, attitudes, practices and beliefs
B.
Workplace culture is based on what the manager states are the cultural norms
C.
Workplace culture changes with management changes
D.
Workplace culture is based on shared values, behaviours, goals, attitudes, practices and beliefs
10. 
How many hospitals in Australia have gained Magnet Recognition Status?
A.
None
B.
One
C.
Three
D.
Five
11. 
Intuition:
A.
Only helps highly experience nurses
B.
Is only helpful if reasoning is used
C.
Is a legitimate aspect of a nursing judgement
D.
Usually is not correct and best ignored
12. 
Critical thinking is:
A.
Jumping quickly to conclusions
B.
Emotional
C.
Mindlessness
D.
Outcome focused
13. 
A good reason to delegate is it demonstrates:
A.
You are a team player
B.
You can organize your workload
C.
Respect for the talents of others
D.
You aren’t wanting to control everything
14. 
Problems can be recognized by:
A.
Checking textbooks
B.
Someone pointing them out
C.
An unusual patient progression
D.
Having time to think
15. 
In the context of nursing, what does the word delegation mean?
A.
Transfers accountability for a procedure or task without transferring responsibility
B.
Transfers responsibility for a procedure or task without transferring accountability
C.
Transfers neither responsibility nor accountability for a procedure or task
D.
Transfers both responsibility and accountability for a procedure or task
16. 
An obstacle to critical thinking for nurses can be
A.
Rising patient complexity
B.
Boredom
C.
Google
D.
Missing meal breaks
17. 
If something doesn’t feel right it:
A.
Probably isn’t so pay attention to that suspicion and investigate
B.
Probably isn’t so pay attention to that suspicion and investigate Probably isn’t but that is for others to work out
C.
Probably is but students don’t know enough to work that out
D.
Probably is so don’t bother raising a concern
18. 
A cause of human error can be:
A.
Lack of attention
B.
Equipment malfunction
C.
Responding immediately to a problem
D.
Having experienced the same thing before
19. 
People don’t delegate because:
A.
They have too much respect for others to ask
B.
They want to seem to be busy
C.
It can be quicker to do it yourself
D.
It is always critical they do all tasks themselves
20. 
Fixation error is:
A.
Having experienced the same thing before
B.
Lack of attention
C.
Equipment malfunction
D.
Only looking at the specific problem and not assessing the patient
21. 
Which of the following is not a characteristic of quota sampling?
A.
Those who are available to be surveyed in public places are unlikely to constitute a representative sample
B.
The researcher chooses who to approach and so might bias the sample
C.
The random selection of units makes it possible to calculate the standard error
D.
It is a relatively fast and cheap way of finding out about public opinions
22. 
Why is it important to have well formulated research questions?
A.
It gives greater clarity to the research process and what you wish to research
B.
It leads to more focused research
C.
It provides structure to my work
D.
All of the above
23. 
If a study is reliable, this means that:
A.
The findings can be generalized to other social phenomena
B.
The measures devised for concepts are stable on different occasions
C.
The methods are outlined in the methods discussion clearly enough for the research to be replicated
D.
It was conducted by a reputable researcher who can be trusted
24. 
What is a research design?
A.
A way of conducting research that is not grounded in theory
B.
A framework for every stage of the collection and analysis of data
C.
The style in which you present your research findings, e.g. a graph
D.
The choice between using qualitative or quantitative methods
25. 
Which of the following is not a type of non-probability sampling?
A.
Convenience sampling
B.
Stratified random sampling
C.
Snowball sampling
D.
Quota sampling
26. 
What effect does increasing the sample size have upon the sampling error?
A.
It reduces the sampling error
B.
It has no effect on the sampling error
C.
It increases the sampling error
D.
None of the above
27. 
A simple random sample is one in which:
A.
From a random starting point, every nth unit from the sampling frame is selected
B.
Every unit of the population has an equal chance of being selected
C.
A non-probability strategy is used, making the results difficult to generalize
D.
The researcher has a certain quota of respondents to fill for various social groups
28. 
What does the term ‘longitudinal design’ mean?
A.
A study which is very long to read
B.
A study with two contrasting cases
C.
A study completed far away from where the researcher lives
D.
A study completed over a distinct period of time to map changes in social phenomena
29. 
What is a cross-sectional design?
A.
A design that is devised when the researcher is in a bad mood
B.
A comparison of two or more variables longitudinally
C.
The collection of data from more than one case at one moment in time
D.
Research into one particular section of society, e.g. the middle classes
30. 
Snowball sampling can help the researcher to:
A.
Access deviant or hidden populations
B.
Theorise inductively in a qualitative study
C.
Overcome the problem of not having an accessible sampling frame
D.
All of the above
31. 
Which of the following are barriers to translating evidence to practice?
A.
Research findings are not relevant to practice
B.
Difficulty accessing research findings
C.
Difficulty understanding research findings
D.
All of the above
32. 
Which of the following is true about health policy?
A.
Policies reference the evidence used in policy development
B.
Policies are not reviewed
C.
Policies are only for management
D.
Policies are independent documents which do not interface with other documents
33. 
Evidence-based nurses ask whether there is a evidence basis for the care they deliver in order to:
A.
Change their practice regularly
B.
Make certain they can evaluate findings correctly
C.
Convince their colleagues to change practice
D.
Provide the most effective and safe care for their patients
34. 
Which of the following measures is best used to determine the most authoritative evidence?
A.
Hierarchy of evidence
B.
Literature review
C.
Evidence base practice
D.
Problem based approach
35. 
Which of the following statements is not applicable to using an evidence-base in nursing practice?
A.
To ensure the best quality of care given is to patients
B.
The use of research evidence in nursing practice does not need to be evaluated after it is used or implemented
C.
Evidence used in nursing practice must be appraised for its validity and applicability
D.
To ensure that nursing decisions are based on the best quality evidence
36. 
Which of the following is at the pinnacle of the hierarchy of evidence and represents quality evidence?
A.
Editorials, expert opinion
B.
Case control studies
C.
Case series, case reports
D.
Systematic reviews
37. 
Clinical effectiveness is about which of the following?
A.
Introducing new clinical procedures into practice
B.
Getting evidence of what works into everyday clinical practice and evaluating its effect on patient care
C.
Evaluating the best evidence
D.
Undertaking research in order to determine effective outcomes
38. 
Why is it important to translate evidence into practice?
A.
So nurses know what to do
B.
To make researcher valued
C.
Essential for safe, effective and efficient care delivery
D.
Supports clinical decision
39. 
Gold standard refers to:
A.
Having good systems in place
B.
Highest quality evidence
C.
Highest results in the audit process
D.
Having the roster out on time
40. 
Who endorses organizational policies?
A.
The employees
B.
Senior management
C.
The union
D.
The CEO/Nursing Director