Navigation » List of Schools » Los Angeles Mission College » Psychology » Psychology 041 – Lifespan Psychology » Fall 2020 » Chapter 19 Quiz
Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:
Question #1
A unestablished bereavement
B disenfranchised grief
C anticipatory grieving
D bereavement overload
Question #2
A Children grieving the loss of a parent or sibling suffer fewer physical symptoms than adults grieving the loss of a partner or child.
B Many children say they actively maintain mental contact with their dead parent or sibling, dreaming about and speaking to them frequently.
C Typically, children experience physical symptoms of grief for a few weeks and then experience more internal symptoms.
D In follow-up studies, children report that they rarely think about the deceased parent or sibling after one to three years.
Question #3
A spouse
B child
C sibling
D parent
Question #4
A recover more quickly.
B engage in anticipatory grieving.
C conclude that they could have prevented the death.
D experience disenfranchised grief.
Question #5
A express distress less directly.
B do not anticipate grief.
C express depression less directly.
D seek social support more readily.
Question #6
A are not recognized in the United States or Canada.
B state in writing the desired end-of-life medical treatment.
C authorize mercy killing.
D guarantee personal control over the right to die.
Question #7
A involuntary passive euthanasia.
B passive loss.
C mandatory passive euthanasia
D voluntary active euthanasia.
Question #8
A involuntary euthanasia.
B assisted suicide.
C passive euthanasia.
D voluntary active euthanasia.
Question #9
A because hearing functions longer than other senses.
B only when it replaces use of pain medications.
C only when patients are conscious and fully aware.
D but often upsets family members who desire quiet times.
Question #10
A aims to provide a caring community sensitive to the dying person’s needs.
B death often triggers feelings of anger, frustration, and confusion.
C provides spiritual and emotional support, but not palliative care.
D emphasizes rehabilitation rather than high-quality terminal care.
Question #11
A forbid the doctors to talk to him about his condition because it will bring bad fortune to the family.
B pretend there is nothing wrong in an attempt to prevent unnecessary stress.
C talk openly and honestly about his condition, so that he can focus on resolving family conflicts before he dies.
D avoid informing him of his condition because they believe doing so hastens death.
Question #12
A Irish
B French
C Japanese
D Middle Eastern
Question #13
A after bargaining and before depression.
B only in the last weeks or days before death.
C only in the last hours or minutes before death.
D within the first two months after learning the diagnosis.
Question #14
A acceptance
B denial
C anger
D bargaining
Question #15
A by bargaining for extra time.
B with anger.
C by denying the seriousness of the illness.
D with acceptance.
Question #16
A who believe in a rewarding afterlife but rarely pray or attend services.
B with deep faith in some form of higher force or being.
C who do not believe in a higher force or being.
Question #17
A is in the mortality phase of death.
B is in the agonal phase of death.
C is brain dead.
D has entered a persistent vegetative state.
Question #18
A the individual passes into permanent death.
B the individual’s regular heartbeat disintegrates, causing muscle spasms and gasping.
C the heartbeat, circulation, breathing, and brain functioning stop.
D resuscitation is still possible.
Question #19
A the individual’s regular heartbeat disintegrates, causing muscle spasms and gasping.
B resuscitation is no longer possible.
C heartbeat, circulation, breathing, and brain functioning stop.
D the individual passes into permanent death.
Question #20
A geriatrics.
B anthropology.
C thanatology.
D gerontology.