LPN TO RN CHAPTER 17 PREP U
Which statement by a nurse case manager regarding this nurse's role in client care is most accurate?
"I provide indirect care to my clients by coordinating their treatment with other disciplines."
The nurse is preparing to administer a blood pressure medication to a client. To ensure the client's safety, what is the priority action for the nurse to take?
Assess the client's blood pressure to determine if the medication is indicated.
Discharge plans for a client with a mental health disorder include living with family members. The nurse learns that the family is no longer willing to allow the client to live with them. What is the nurse's most appropriate action?
Collaborate with other disciplines to revise the discharge plans.
A charge nurse has assigned a new nurse a task that the nurse has not been trained to perform. Which is the most appropriate action for the nurse to take?
Consult with the charge nurse before performing the procedure.
A client on the medical-surgical unit is scheduled for several diagnostic tests. The nurse is concerned that the tests will be too tiring for the client. What would be the nurse's mostappropriate action?
Coordinate with the other disciplines to schedule the tests with adequate rest for the client.
The nurse must give instructions before discharge to a 13-year-old in a sickle cell crisis. Three of the client's friends from school are visiting. In order to assure effective instruction, what should the nurse plan to do?
Delay the instruction until the visitors leave.
A nurse is preparing to educate a client about self-care after cataract surgery. Which should the nurse do first?
Determine the client's willingness to follow the regimen.
Which is the priority question for the nurse to consider before implementing a new intervention?
Does this treatment make sense for this client?
The client is in a rehabilitation unit after a traumatic brain injury. In order to facilitate the client's recovery, what would be the nurse's most appropriate intervention?
Encourage the client to provide as much self-care as possible.
Priority setting is based on the information obtained during reassessment and is used to rank nursing diagnoses. Each factor contributes to priority setting except which?
Finances of the client
During morning report, the night nurse tells the oncoming nurse that the client has been medicated for pain and is resting comfortably. Thirty minutes later, the client calls and requests pain medication. What is the nurse's appropriate first action?
Go to the client and assess the client's pain.
Which is an independent (nurse-initiated) action?
Helping to allay a client's fears about surgery
The nurse ascertains that a client is failing to follow the plan of care that was collaboratively developed. Further investigation determines that the plan of care is not appropriate for this client. What is the nurse's next step in correcting this problem?
Make changes in the plan of care based upon assessment data.
The physician has ordered that the client should ambulate 3 times a day. The nurse enters the room to ambulate the client and the client reports pain. What is the nurse's most appropriate action?
Medicate the client and wait to ambulate later.
The nurse is assigned a client who had an uneventful colon resection 2 days ago and requires a dressing change. To which nursing team member should the nurse avoid delegating the dressing change?
Nursing assistant
The nurse is coordinating care for a client with continuous pulse oximetry who requires pharyngeal suctioning. To which staff member should the nurse avoid delegating the task of suctioning?
Nursing assistant who is a nursing student
The emergency room nurse is performing an initial assessment of a new client who presents with severe dizziness. The client reports a medical history of hypertension, gout, and migraine headaches. Which step should the nurse take first in the comprehensive assessment?
Perform vital signs and blood glucose level.
When the nurse enters the room to assess a client's vital signs, the client insists that the nurse perform handwashing. What is the nurse's most appropriate action?
Praise the client for taking an active role in the client's care.
What is the priority goal of interventions for a risk diagnosis?
Prevent an actual problem
Which task would be appropriate for the nurse to delegate to an unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP)?
Provide the client with assistance in transferring to the bedside commode.
Before implementing any planned intervention, which action should the nurse take first?
Reassess the client to determine whether the action is needed.
A client with hypertension being seen for follow-up care has a blood pressure of 160/100 mm Hg. The client reports following the treatment regimen closely and that blood pressure readings have been elevated for the last 2 weeks. What is the nurse's most appropriate action?
Report the findings to the physician for further plans.
Nursing interventions for the client after prostate surgery include assisting the client to ambulate to the bathroom. The nurse concludes that the client no longer requires assistance. What is the nurse's best action?
Revise the care plan to allow the client to ambulate to the bathroom independently.
The nurse is discussing diabetes mellitus with the family members of a client recently diagnosed. To promote the health of the family members, what would be the most important information for the nurse to include?
Risk factors and prevention of diabetes mellitus
A client is admitted to the mental health center after attempting suicide. Which client concern is the priority for the nurse to manage?
Risk of self-harm
The nurse has assessed a client and determined that the client has abnormal breath sounds and low oxygen saturation level. The nurse is performing what type of nursing intervention?
Surveillance
While auscultating a client's lung sounds, the nurse notes crackles in the left lower lobe, which were not present at the start of the shift. The nurse is engaged in which type of nursing intervention?
Surveillance
A new unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP) is preparing to ambulate an obese client. The registered nurse (RN) is concerned about the UAP's ability to safely ambulate the client. Which would be the nurse's most appropriate action?
Tell the UAP that the RN will assist the UAP with the client's ambulation.
The nurse is caring for a 10-year-old client who is newly diagnosed with a seizure disorder. What variable would alter the nurse's plan for educating the client and parent?
The client has a 12-year-old sister who has been treated for a seizure disorder for 3 years
The nurse is caring for a 10-year-old client who is newly diagnosed with a seizure disorder. What variable would alter the nurse's plan for educating the client and parent?
The client has a 12-year-old sister who has been treated for a seizure disorder for 3 years.
The nurse is planning instruction on wound care to an adult client. What variables would cause the nurse to alter the education plan? Select all that apply.
The client is blind. The client denies the need for education.
What assessment data would indicate to the nurse at the conclusion of an education session that the client education was effective? Select all that apply.
The client verbalizes understanding of the instructions. The client is able to answer the nurse's questions. The client discusses the specifics of what was taught during the session.
What assessment data would indicate to the nurse at the conclusion of an education session that the client education was effective? Select all that apply.
The client verbalizes understanding of the instructions.The client is able to answer the nurse's questions.The client discusses the specifics of what was taught during the session.
The registered nurse is working with an unlicensed assistive personnel. Which client should the nurse not delegate to the unlicensed assistive personnel?
The client with continuous pulse oximetry who requires pharyngeal suctioning.
The client is having difficulty breathing. The respiratory rate is 44 and the oxygen saturation is 89% (0.89 L). The nurse raises the head of the bed and applies oxygen at 3 L/min per nasal cannula. How does the nurse determine the effectiveness of the interventions? Select all that apply.
The client's respiratory rate decreases. The client states, "I can breathe easier now." The client's oxygen saturation level increases.
The Joint Commission (TJC) encourages clients to become active, involved, and informed participants on the health care team. What nursing action follows TJC recommendations for improving client safety by encouraging them to speak up?
The nurse encourages the client to participate in all treatment decisions as the center of the health care team.
A client who has been in a vegetative state for years is scheduled for an elective surgery. The nurse is questioning whether the procedure is necessary. What is the nurse's appropriate firstaction?
The nurse should address the concern with the surgeon.
A nurse who is experienced caring only for well babies is assigned to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) because of a shortage of nurses in the NICU. The nurse is assigned to an infant on a ventilator who will require blood transfusions during the shift. What is the nurse's mostappropriate course of action?
The nurse should inform the charge nurse that the nurse does not have the experience to properly care for this client.
A nurse is providing care to several assigned clients and decides to delegate the task of morning vital signs to unlicensed assistive personnel. The nurse would assume responsibility and refrain from delegating this task for which client?
a Client with a high fever receiving intravenous fluids, antibiotics and oxygen
A nurse suspects that the client with Crohn's disease does not understand the medication regimen or diet modifications required to manage the illness. What is the nurse's mostappropriate action?
Ask the client to verbalize the medication regimen and diet modifications required.
The nurse is preparing a client for surgery when the client tells the nurse that the client no longer wants to have the surgery. How should the nurse most appropriately respond?
Discuss with the client the reasons for declining surgery.
A client is diagnosed with hypertension, placed on a low-sodium diet, and given smoking cessation literature. The nurse observes the client eating from a fast food restaurant bag that a family member brought in and the client states, "I don't think I can do this." What is the nurse's first objective when implementing care for this client?
Identify what barriers the client feels are preventing adherence with the plan.
The nurse is caring for a client with congestive heart failure. The nurse manager informs the nurse that the client was enrolled in a clinical trial to assess whether a 10-minute walk, 3 times per day, leads to expedited discharge. Which type of evaluation best describes what the researchers are examining?
Outcome
One hour after receiving pain medication, a postoperative client reports intense pain. What is the nurse's appropriate first action?
Assess the client to determine the cause of the pain.
Which is the nurse's priority question to consider prior to delegating a task to an unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP)?
How can I explain the task to the UAP?