Full Test Bank Ch13 Are You Feeling Okay? Health And Health - Social Problems Action 1e | Solution Bank McNamara by Robert McNamara. DOCX document preview.
Chapter 13: Are You Feeling Okay? Health and Health Care
Test Bank
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 1
1) For the first time since US opinion polls began, health care in 2020
Section reference: Section 1
a. is something Americans are optimistic about.
b. dropped in public concern behind most other pressing social problems.
c. has ranked in the top three categories of pressing social problems.
d. dominated the election cycle.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 2
2) Arguably, the U.S. already has pockets of single payer health care as seen in
Section reference: Section 1
a. Medicaid.
b. Veterans’ Administration.
c. Medicare.
d. all of the above.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 3
3) The research points to 3 key factors that influence the need for health care reform in this country.
Section reference: Section 1
a. Explosive costs, overspecialization in medicine, the aging of US population
b. Influx of immigrants and refugees, drug costs, the obesity epidemic
c. Low quality of care, overspecialization in medicine, influx of immigrants and refugees
d. Aging of US population, obesity epidemic, low quality of care
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 4
4) In 2019, health care spending is growing at a faster rate than the national economy. Growth is expected to average about _____ between 2015 and 2025.
Section reference: Section 1
a. 2% each year
b. 6% each year
c. 13% each year
d. 24% each year
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 5
5) Despite the fact that the U.S. spends _____ per capita for health care compared to other developed countries, the health outcomes are no better if not worse.
Section reference: Section 1
a. Only slightly less
b. Roughly the same amount
c. 1.5 times more
d. More than double
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 6
6) The change in price of the life-saving allergic response injection medication EpiPen manufactured by Mylan Corporation illustrates
Section reference: Section 1
a. the unrestrained profit motive of the pharmaceutical industry.
b. the prescription industry’s commitment to patients.
c. the power of government regulation to control health care costs.
d. the vast improvements of medical technology that require higher costs.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 7
7) What is the difference between general primary care and specialization among physicians?
Section reference: Section 1
a. Primary care physicians require more advanced and longer training than specialists who only learn one branch of medicine.
b. Primary care physicians accept Medicaid and Medicare insurance but specialists only accept private insurance or cash/credit.
c. Primary care physicians work in public clinics and hospitals whereas specialists work in private settings.
d. Primary care physicians generally treat all patients for all reasons whereas specialists only treat specific patients or conditions and typically require referrals from primary care doctors.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 8
8) Why is specialization in medicine problematic?
Section reference: Section 1
a. Physicians are shouldered with the burden of the costs and times for additional training.
b. Specialization reduces practitioners’ abilities to refine their skill and knowledge base on key areas of health care.
c. Specialists earn less money than primary care physicians and provide lower quality care despite rising need among patients.
d. Referral requirements cause backlogs and long waits for needed care, more patients need comprehensive care, far higher health care costs.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 9
9) By 2025, the government will account for _____ of all US health care spending.
Section reference: Section 1
a. about one-quarter
b. nearly half
c. about two-thirds
d. the vast majority
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 10
10) Which statistic demonstrates how even if the U.S. had affordable care for everyone, its use will remain significantly uneven?
Section reference: Section 1
a. 50% of the population only accounts for 3% of spending
b. 5% of the population accounts for 50% of spending
c. Both A and B
d. Neither A nor B
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 11
11) The distribution of the $3.8 trillion in health care costs including (among other things) about _____ to hospitals; doctors and other providers account for another _____; prescription drugs bought through pharmacies comprise another _____
Section reference: Section 2
a. 10% ; 33%; 20%.
b. 33% ; 20%; 10%.
c. 20% ; 33%; 10%.
d. 20% ; 10%; 33%.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 12
12) Which group in the U.S. has the longest life expectancy?
Section reference: Section 2
a. White Americans
b. Hispanic Americans
c. Asian Americans
d. Black Americans
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 13
13) What is the infant mortality rate?
Section reference: Section 2
a. The number of deaths before age 3 for all lives births.
b. The number of abortions, miscarriages, and newborn deaths during childbirth.
c. The number of deaths of newborns during childbirth.
d. The number of deaths in the first year of life for all live births.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 14
14) The infant mortality rate for African Americans is
Section reference: Section 2
a. slightly higher than the rate for Whites.
b. double the rate for Whites.
c. about the same as the rate for Whites.
d. lower than the rate for Whites.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 15
15) 8 out of 10 people in the U.S. who are uninsured are
Section reference: Section 2
a. families that made 400% or less of the federal poverty line.
b. unemployed working age adults.
c. ineligible for benefits due to pre-existing conditions.
d. individuals who prefer to buy their own health care services and pay out of pocket.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 16
16) In 2016, 27 million Americans were uninsured despite the Obamacare policy that
Section reference: Section 2
a. required states to fund insurance for all residents.
b. uninsured individuals would be punishable by mandatory jail sentences.
c. required health insurance companies to offer affordable coverage for everyone.
d. mandated people to obtain health insurance coverage either through a plan at work, privately, or through a subsidized state or federal insurance exchange.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 17
17) People of color of all income levels and low-income Whites have
Section reference: Section 2
a. special benefits to ensure access to health insurance coverage.
b. low access to quality care and less preventive care.
c. both A and B.
d. neither A nor B.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 18
18) A 2018 CDC report found that Blacks and Hispanics report
Section reference: Section 3
a. better health status than Whites and Asians.
b. fewer average healthy days compared to Whites.
c. higher access to chronic disease management than Whites.
d. less need for health care compared to Whites.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 19
19) With the exception of Asian Americans, virtually every non-White racial/ethnic group in the U.S. rates their health as
Section reference: Section 2
a. very poor.
b. poor or fair.
c. fair or good.
d. good.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 20
20) Which US groups are noted in the chapter as being less likely to be immunized in general, demonstrating lower access to health information and care?
Section reference: Section 2
a. Women
b. LGBTQ people
c. African Americans, Hispanics, and Native Americans
d. Millennials
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 21
21) How did the idea of health insurance come about?
Section reference: Section 3
a. The U.S. followed the European model
b. During WWII, companies could not afford to increase wages so they used health care coverage as a perk for employees
c. Doctors pooled together after the Great Depression to set prices and contract with insurance companies so that they could better protect their practices and focus on caring for patients.
d. Once the government started paying for the health care of the elderly and for low-income families in the 1960s, those companies that coordinated the care for the government began to offer coverage for private employers as well.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 22
22) By the 1950s, health insurance was equated with what it meant to have a “good” job—one that offered a high salary and benefits like health insurance. When did health care costs begin to rise such that companies began dropping coverage?
Section reference: Section 3
a. 1990s
b. 1980s
c. 1970s
d. 1960s
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 23
23) During whose presidency was managed care created?
Section reference: Section 3
a. GHW Bush
b. GW Bush
c. Clinton
d. Obama
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 24
24) What is private health insurance?
Section reference: Section 3
a. Insurance companies collect premiums that go into special savings accounts that can be drawn upon when a patient needs medical care, without taxation.
b. People contract with insurance brokers who negotiate prices across different providers and hospitals to find the best deals for their plan members.
c. Like Social Security, the government withdraws taxes from each paycheck for eligible income earners that go into public funds to support that worker’s and their family’s health care expenses.
d. Like car insurance, people pay premiums to 3rd party companies to maintain coverage should something happen. The insurance company in turn pays doctors and hospitals for any treatment or service the patient may need.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 25
25) What is a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO)?
Section reference: Section 3
a. A private insurance company that gives members, for a fixed monthly fee, the autonomy to see whatever provider they wish to see for whatever services, as long as they adhere to doctor’s orders and/or a prescribed course of treatment or therapy.
b. HMOs offer incentives to government employees to drive down health care costs; workers gain higher wages for actions such as never smoking or quitting smoking, or remaining at a health weight or losing weight.
c. A collective bargaining group established by labor unions to negotiate health care costs for its members.
d. An HMO, for a fixed monthly fee, provides total health care within a strict network of providers for patients with an emphasis on prevention in an effort to avoid costly treatments in the future.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 26
26) A managed care health care system is a business such that
Section reference: Section 3
a. the coordination of care is more consistent, efficient, and effective than any public endeavor to organize health care.
b. doctors have become not only medical experts, but experts in the business of health care as well.
c. controlling costs and market sensitivity drives decision making.
d. customer/patient satisfaction is the highest priority.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 27
27) This provides health care coverage for low-income families or those who are disabled. It also covers a certain segment of senior citizens in nursing homes.
Section reference: Section 3
a. Medicaid
b. Medicare
c. Managed Care
d. Blue Cross/Blue Shield
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 28
28) This is government-run health care which provides partial medical and hospital insurance for Americans aged 65 or older and Social Security recipients.
Section reference: Section 3
a. Medicaid
b. Medicare
c. Managed Care
d. Blue Cross/Blue Shield
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 29
29) Both Medicaid and Medicare combined accounted for what percentage of US federal spending in 2010?
Section reference: Section 3
a. 10%
b. 25%
c. 40%
d. 55%
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 30
30) Massachusetts, Hawaii, and Vermont are examples of states where
Section reference: Section 3
a. managed care companies and patients are thriving.
b. Medicaid is banned.
c. they have had success creating and implementing their own health insurance plans for their citizens, especially the poor.
d. Medicare is only offered to lower-income residents as opposed to all people over age 65.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 31
31) What is the two-tiered model of health care spending in Singapore?
Section reference: Section 3
a. A mix of HMOs and PPOs.
b. One-quarter of the country is privately insured (through individual contracts, not through work), and three quarters are publicly insured.
c. Hospitals control their costs as well as pharmacy expenses and doctors and providers bill for their care—all through public spending.
d. Two thirds of the spending comes from insurance while the remaining third is paid for through public spending.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 32
32) Which of the following is NOT a key component of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA)?
Section reference: Section 3
a. All health insurance is managed and paid for by the government.
b. State insurance exchanges were created so that a wide range of health insurance plans can be offered at competitive prices.
c. Employers who have more than 50 employees who do not provide health insurance coverage pay a penalty.
d. Small businesses can buy insurance for their employees through state exchanges and receive tax credits.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 33
33) The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) passed in 2010 is also known as
Section reference: Section 3
a. Health Care Freedom.
b. Obamacare Repeal Reconciliation.
c. Patient Freedom.
d. Obamacare.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 34
34) Each of the following were challenges to the success of the ACA except?
Section reference: Section 3
a. The web page was not operational and required extensions for people to enroll after the initial deadline.
b. The program did not end up reducing the uninsured population.
c. Many Americans had their existing coverage cancelled or faced higher costs despite promises that this would not happen.
d. Heavy Republican opposition and several legal challenges.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 35
35) What happened to the ACA after President Trump was elected?
Section reference: Section 3
a. It suffered legal setbacks and additional challenges, but is still in place as the Trump administration failed to implement reform.
b. It was repealed and replaced by the American Health Care Act
c. The program slowly gained bipartisan support and later, Trump’s endorsement.
d. Trumpcare was implemented as an alternative with no individual mandate or employer requirements to provide insurance.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 36
36) What changes did President Biden make in 2021 to correct President Trump’s handling of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Section reference: Section 5
a. Implemented a plan to quickly release millions of vaccines that the Trump administration had held back.
b. Mandated mask wearing on all federal property.
c. Put full trust in medical experts and the CDC
d. All of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 37
37) Throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, there has been continued misinformation. Even the development of a vaccine has resulted in considerable skepticism, as conspiracy theories and misinformation have been presented by
Section reference: Section 3
a. all sides of the media, and then presidential candidate Joe Biden.
b. health care providers and vaccine companies.
c. Russian hackers and social media company executives.
d. conservative media, far-right advocates and politicians, and President Trump.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 38
38) What is the “sick role” in approaching how societies handle health care and illness?
Section reference: Section 4
a. The benefits to society added when people are faced with illness or injury such as providing jobs for health care workers and pharmaceutical developers.
b. The example set by patients with chronic illness or injury to convince others to avoid unhealthy or unsafe behaviors.
c. People with illnesses take on a character or part, in a sense, and they are not held to the same behavioral standards or obligations when sick.
d. The dysfunction caused when people are dishonest about being sick and are actually healthy.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 39
39) Which of the following is an expectation set for someone having the “sick role”?
Section reference: Section 4
a. To be able to afford treatment.
b. To want to get better and want to be healthy.
c. To try any and all potential treatments and therapies.
d. To be brave.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 40
40) Which sociological theory of health and illness would likely study the notion that health care providers are pressured to spend less time with individual patients in a managed care setting which may harm the rapport and ultimately the quality of care?
Section reference: Section 4
a. Functionalism
b. Conflict theory
c. Symbolic interactionism
d. Managed care theory
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 41
41) Which sociological theory of health and illness would focus on how disease interferes with people’s ability to perform the roles and functions necessary for society to operate smoothly and keeps society from growing in positive ways?
Section reference: Section 4
a. Functionalism
b. Conflict theory
c. Symbolic interactionism
d. Managed care theory
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 42
42) The fact that the Covid-19 pandemic has seen a political and dangerous erosion of trust in medicine and medical experts for many patients in America would be a key topic of study for which sociological theory of health and illness?
Section reference: Section 4
a. Functionalism
b. Conflict theory
c. Symbolic interactionism
d. Managed care theory
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 43
43) Which sociological theory of health and illness emphasizes how the US health care system provides health care as a privilege (for some), and not a right?
Section reference: Section 5
a. Functionalism
b. Conflict theory
c. Symbolic interactionism
d. Managed care theory
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 44
44) The social construction of disease, the notion that some substances are labelled as healthy or medicinal while others are not, and what it means to show up in the world with a chronic condition for different people would all be areas of study for
Section reference: Section 5
a. Functionalism.
b. Conflict theory.
c. Symbolic interactionism.
d. Managed care theory.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 45
45) Drug companies set the prices and distribution of medication, particularly since they have no real competition in the market. Insurance companies also seek to profit by increasing premiums for coverage, maintaining high deductibles for policy holders, and limiting the costs of treatment. These are aspects of the health care system in the U.S. that would be explored by
Section reference: Section 5
a. Functionalism.
b. Conflict theory.
c. Symbolic interactionism.
d. Managed care theory.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 46
46) What typically motivates hospital innovations in services and technology?
Section reference: Section 5
a. Government policy
b. Profit motive
c. Patient demand
d. Scientific research and development
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 47
47) Does evidence suggest that the U.S. should direct more focus on preventive care?
Section reference: Section 5
a. No, preventive care is far too expensive.
b. No, preventive care is another insurance industry scam.
c. Yes, preventive care is shown to reduce costs and improve health outcomes.
d. Yes, the U.S. could end all disease and illness with preventive care.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 48
48) The US model of health care is referred to by some as “sick care” because
Section reference: Section 5
a. the U.S. is the best at curing disease for all patients.
b. Americans are on average more “sick” than healthy.
c. the system itself is “sick.”
d. proactive and preventive care that fights off future illness is not a priority.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 49
49) What is one notable drawback that evidence predicts could occur with universal health care in the U.S.?
Section reference: Section 5
a. Over-empowered physicians given too much authority.
b. Complete socialism.
c. Longer wait times for care and reduced services for certain conditions or medications.
d. Higher health care costs overall.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 50
50) What role does sociology play in clarifying the US health care debate?
Section reference: Section 5
a. Arms politicians with sharp rhetoric.
b. Studies inform discussions with detailed evidence across the complex issues involved in health care and policy.
c. Allows voters to decide the perfect solution to fixing health care policy.
d. Reveals the rationale for maintaining the status quo.
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