Answer: a
Answer: a
Answer:
a. “systematic and continuous actions that result in measurable improvement in health care services and in the health status of targeted groups. Quality improvement includes identifying errors and hazards in care; understanding and implementing basic safety design principles such as standardization and simplifications; continually understanding and measuring quality of care in terms of structure, process, and outcomes in relation to patient and community needs; and designing and testing interventions to change processes and systems of care, with the objective of improving quality”
Commission on the Accreditation of Athletic Training Education. https://caate.net/pp-standards/.
b. The athletic trainer would utilize the data collected to determine if the patient’s illness/injury was improving. This information would be utilized to make changes to the rehabilitation as well as recommendations for work status. Once the patient, both through physical evaluation and outcomes measures, returned to a baseline the patient would be released to full activity and from care.
Answer: increased prevalence of illness, injury, disability, or morbidity experienced by a specific population when compared to another
Answer: b
Answer: a
Answer: b
Answer: a
Answer: a
Answer: a
Answer: a
Answer: b
Answer: d
Answer: c
Answer: a
Answer: a
Answer: a
Answer: b
Answer: b
Answer: d
Answer: 1-c, 2-e, 3-a, 4-f, 5-b, 6-d
Answer: 1-d, 2-f, 3-e, 4-c, 5-b, 6-a
Actions That Can Result in Litigation
a. Failing to warn an individual about the risks involved in sport participation
b. Treating an injured party without consent
c. Failing to provide medical information concerning alternative treatments or the risks involved with the treatment to an athlete
d. Failing to provide safe facilities, fields, and equipment
e. Being aware of a potentially dangerous situation and failing to do anything about it
f. Failing to provide an adequate injury prevention program
g. Allowing an injured or unfit player to participate resulting in further injury or harm
h. Failing to provide quality training, instruction, and supervision
i. Using unsafe equipment
j. Negligently moving an injured athlete before properly immobilizing the injured area
k. Failing to employ qualified medical personnel
l. Failing to have a written emergency action plan
m. Failing to properly recognize an injury or illness, both as immediate acute care and long-term treatment
n. Failing to immediately refer an injured party to the proper physician