Week 7 and Immersion: Midweek Comprehension Quiz
Due Jun 17 at 11:59pm Points 12 Questions 2 Available Jun 15 at 12am - Jun 17 at 11:59pm 3 days
Time Limit 5 Minutes
Instructions
The late assignment policy does not
...
Week 7 and Immersion: Midweek Comprehension Quiz
Due Jun 17 at 11:59pm Points 12 Questions 2 Available Jun 15 at 12am - Jun 17 at 11:59pm 3 days
Time Limit 5 Minutes
Instructions
The late assignment policy does not apply to quizzes and exams. All quizzes and exams close at the time
they are due. For quizzes and exams not submitted by the specified due date and time, a score of zero
will be assigned.
The Week 7 quiz has 2 questions. You will have one attempt.
This quiz must be completed by Wednesday, 11:59 p.m. MT.
Attempt History
Attempt Time Score
LATEST Attempt 1 5 minutes 12 out of 12
Score for this quiz: 12 out of 12
Submitted Jun 17 at 11:45am
This attempt took 5 minutes.
Question 1
2 / 2 pts
I attest to have completed or will complete by the conclusion of the immersion event a minimum of 25
lab hours practicing physical assessment skills during Weeks 1-6 of this course.
Correct!
True
False
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According to the course syllabus, all students are responsible for completing and certifying at least 25
hours practicing physical assessment skills in the course. This attestation certifies you have met this
requirement during the course.
Question 2
10 / 10 pts
According to the Immersion video and Grading Rubric, match the physical assessment skill with the
suggested sequential order (first through fifth) in which the skill should be performed at Immersion
during the check-off evaluation.
Correct!
First
Correct!
Second
Correct!
Third
Correct!
Fourth
Correct!
Fifth
According to the Bates' textbook, when conducting a general, comprehensive physical examination,
move from "head-to-toe." Avoid examining the patient's feet, for example, before checking the face or
mouth. You will quickly see that some segments of the examination are best assessed when the patient
is sitting, such as examination of the head and neck and the thorax and lungs, whereas others are best
obtained with the patient supine, such as the cardiovascular and abdominal examinations. It is important
to note that clinicians vary in where they place different segments of the examination, especially
examinations of the musculoskeletal system and the nervous system. With practice, you will develop
your own sequence of examination, keeping the need for thoroughness and patient comfort in mind.
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