You have assisted during Mr. Rafferty's exercise electrocardiography test and are monitoring him during his cooling-off period. He tells you he feels fine and asks, "So what do the test results say? Am I healthy?" What should you do?
A. Show Mr. Rafferty the ECGs performed during the test.
B. Refer Mr. Rafferty to the physician for the results.
C. Tell Mr. Rafferty that you do not know how to read an ECG.
D. Tell Mr. Rafferty that the results look normal.
Answer: B
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You respond to a laceration call. When you arrive on-scene, you walk into the house and find a person suffering from a severe wrist laceration from a broken window. Without thinking, you immediately grab the wrist and apply direct pressure to the wound. You then realize that, in your hurry to save a life, you forgot to put on your gloves. You look down to see your hand is covered in blood. When
practical, you immediately wash your hands thoroughly. What is your next best action? A) Report the exposure incident because it is the law and you could be fined a large sum of money for failing to report the exposure. B) Report the exposure. Failure to report the exposure may result in you not receiving financial compensation for a potential line-of-duty injury. C) If your hands had no open wounds, it is not required to report the exposure as there is no risk of infection, and you could get in trouble at work for failure to follow policy. D) Report the exposure so you can protect yourself from any accidental infection.
Which of the following pairs of questions are asked about the problem during problem mapping?
A. Why is this person referred to OT? What caused the problem? B. What is the consequence of the problem? What are other problems the person is experiencing? C. What caused the problem? What is the consequence of the problem? D. What needs to be done first? What else needs to be done? E. Why is this person referred to OT? What else needs to be done?