
Exam 3 Prep
Quiz by Kiley Breitenfeld
Tag the questions with any skills you have. Your dashboard will track each student's mastery of each skill.
What type of reasoning does quantitative designs use?
Which strategy to generate meaning is when you look at the number of times a word has recurred?
If the p value < 0.05 what would this be considered?
What does epidemiology mean?
In a data distribution, if the direction of the tail points to the right it’s:
What do significant findings mean?
What is it called if you have no symptoms, but a screening identifies that you have the disease?
In the Metaparadigm of nursing, which element includes the level of wellness, illness, & wellbeing?
What is it when a test result comes back negative, but you have the disease?
What term is essentially doing the same study and coming to similar results?
If the mean = median = mode, what type of curve would you see on a diagram?
In nursing, what are our belief systems that guide practice?
What does being in the 60th percentile for weight mean?
What does prevalence mean?
Viruses that are transferred via mosquitos or ticks are spread through:
What method of eval involves keeping a record of events so we can go back and see each step?
Which type of epidemiology tests hypotheses?
What type of qualitative report is a real-life account of what’s being studied?
What is meant as the host in the epidemiological triad?
What type of qualitative report gives insight into the data collection process and the scientific rigor of the methods?
Is it ethical to ignore incidental findings?
What measure is the range of the middle 50% of the data?
What type of determinant would a vaccine be called?
While practicing as a nurse, how can you use theories?
Which type of coding is done by hand, and is usually tedious and frustrating?
What type of qualitative report is like storytelling and about the experience of a participant observer?
Which type of statistics describes or explains characteristics in the sample?
What measure is the most frequent/common value in a set of data?
How are theory, research, and practice related?
In the Metaparadigm of nursing, which element includes the recipient of care?
What does representativeness mean?
What is the central nursing model that serves as the foundation for theories to apply to practice?
Accepting the null hypothesis when it really should have been rejected, is:
If droplets were coughed on your face, what type of transmission would this be?
What type of an outbreak is constantly present and expected?
Which stats test is most frequently reported in nursing research?
Which stats test is used to find differences between groups using demographics?
What term means the frequency and pattern of a disease occurrence?
What does this describe: a set of ideas about relationships that provide an explanation