NURS 124 Prep U End of Life

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Which of the following does not coincide with Kübler-Ross's stages related to a dying client?

The dying client usually exhibits anger first.

When assessing a terminally ill client, the nurse notices that the client has copious secretions at the back of the throat and in the mouth. The nurse is preparing a teaching plan for the family about caring for these secretions. Which of the following would be least appropriate to include?

Using a soft toothbrush to vigorously clean the mouth

Which term is used to describe the personal feelings that accompany an anticipated or actual loss?

grief

The nurse is describing hospice services to the family of a patient with end-stage heart failure. Which of the following would the nurse be least likely to include as a major focus of care?

invasive therapy

A client who is in end-stage renal failure has been moved to an inpatient hospice facility. The rationale for this move is that the client:

is terminally ill and needs symptom control.

Which term best describes a living will?

medical directive

Which of the following is a term that refers to individual, family, group, and cultural expressions of grief and associated behaviors?

mourning

Which "awareness context" is characterized by the client, family, and health care professionals understanding that the client is dying, but all pretend otherwise?

mutual pretense awareness

A nurse working in the neurologic intensive care unit admits from the emergency department a patient with an inoperable brain tumor. Upon entering the room, the nurse observes that the patient is positioned like part B of the accompanying image. Based on this initial observation, what would the nurse predict about this patient's prognosis?

poor

A patient with end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is admitted to a hospice facility and asks the admitting nurse, "How long will I be allowed to stay here?" What is the best response by the nurse?

"When your stay reaches 6 months, you will be recertified for a continued stay."

For a client to use the Medicare Hospice Benefit, life expectancy needs to be what length of time?

6 months

A nurse is providing care to the family of a client who was brought to the emergency department and suddenly died. Which of the following would be appropriate for the nurse to do? Select all that apply.

Ask the family if they would like to view the body. Provide a private place for the family to be together. Allow the family to express their emotions freely.

The family members of a dying patient are finding it difficult to verbalize feelings and show tenderness for the dying person. Which of the following nursing interventions should a nurse perform in such situations?

Encourage the family members to express their feelings and listen to them in their frank communication.

A client who experienced shock is now nonresponsive and having cardiac dysrhythmias. The client is being mechanically ventilated, receiving medications to maintain renal perfusion, and is not responding to treatment. In this stage, it is most important for the nurse to

Encourage the family to touch and talk to the client.

The nurse practitioner has four patients with chronic illness that require consistent medical and nursing management. Select the condition that is the best example of a "chronically critical and progressively ill" condition.

End-stage renal disease

The nurse is caring for a client with an inoperable brain tumor. What teaching is important for the nurse to do with these clients?

Explaining hospice care and services

The nurse is caring for a client with mid-to-late stage of an inoperable brain tumor. What teaching is important for the nurse to do with this client?

Explaining hospice care and services

The nurse is caring for a pediatric client who is dying. The best way to provide care and comfort to clients who are dying and their families is to first do which of the following?

Explore own feelings on mortality and death and dying.

A nurse is conducting a spiritual assessment of a terminally ill client using the four step FICA process and asks the question, "What gives your life meaning?" The nurse is assessing which of the following?

Faith and belief

In a client with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and respiratory distress, which finding is the earliest sign of reduced oxygenation?

Increased restlessness

A client in the hospital is nearing the end of life, is unconscious, and is experiencing gurgling from the respiratory tract. Which route will the nurse use to provide the client atropine?

Intravenous

Which "awareness context" is characterized by the client, family, and health care professionals understanding that the client is dying, but all pretend otherwise?

Mutual pretense awareness

A hospice nurse is visiting the home of a client who was recently diagnosed with a terminal illness. The nurse is developing the client's plan of care and is assessing beliefs and preferences about end-of-life care. The nurse would expect to complete this assessment at which time?

Over the course of several visits

A client is declared to have a terminal illness. What intervention will a nurse perform related to the final decision of a dying client?

Respect the client's and family members' choices.

The mother of two young children has been diagnosed with HIV and expresses fear of dying. How should the nurse best respond to the client?

"Can you tell me what concerns you most about dying?"

A client with leukemia is being discharged from the hospital to hospice care. Which statement by the client indicates the client is not appropriately dealing with spiritual distress?

"I do not understand why this happened to me."

The nurse arrives to the home of a client with a terminal illness who has just passed away. Which response will the nurse make when the family member states that the last dose of pain medication provided caused the death?

"It is possible that your family member died close to the time of the medication but the medication did not cause the death."

During a home care visit to a client in hospice, the client's spouse reveals to the nurse an understanding that the client's death is inevitable. Recognizing the spouse is exemplifying the Kübler-Ross stage of acceptance, which statement by the nurse is most appropriate?

"Tell me how you plan to react when you first realize that your spouse is breathless and has no pulse."

A total artificial heart (TAH) is an electrically powered pump that circulates blood into the pulmonary artery and the aorta, thus replacing the functions of both the right and left ventricles. What makes it different from an LVAD?

An LVAD only supports a failing left ventricle.

Based on the most common concern of a dying patient, the hospice nurse should:

Administer pain medication on a schedule that prevents pain from intensifying.

The nurse identifies a nursing diagnosis of Imbalanced nutrition: less than body requirements for a terminally ill client who is near the end of life. Which of the following would the nurse expect to include in the client's plan of care?

Advice for the family to have fruit juices readily available at the client's bedside.

All nurses care for clients who are grieving. It is important for the nurse to understand the grieving process for which reason?

Allows for the nurse to facilitate the grieving process

A family of a dying client reports that their loved one is experiencing more shortness of breath. Which nursing intervention is most appropriate at this time?

Call the health care provider to obtain an oxygen order

A nurse is providing care to a client experiencing symptoms associated with terminal illness. Which of the following would be most appropriate to use as a means for managing the client's symptoms?

Client's goals

Medicare and Medicaid hospice benefit criteria allow clients with a life expectancy of 6 months or less to be admitted to hospice. However, the median length of stay in a hospice program is just 21.3 days. Which reason explains the underuse of hospice care services?

Clients and families view hospice care as giving up

A terminally ill client asks the nurse, "Am I dying?" The family has asked the health care team not to disclose the client's terminal illness. What is the best action by the nurse with the client's question? Select all that apply.

Communicate the client's wishes to the family. Consult with the health care provider Provide correct information to the client.

Which condition is a rare, transmissible, progressive fatal disease of the central nervous system characterized by spongiform degeneration of the gray matter of the brain?

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

A client has learned of a terminal illness and impending death. The client asks the nurse to explain the concepts and care that are provided under the definition of palliative care. Which of the following would the nurse include in the explanation for this client? Select all that apply.

Provides pain relief Integrates spirituality Offers a team approach to care Enhances quality of life

As the moment of death approaches, which of the following does the nurse encourage the family to do?

Speak to the client in a calm and soothing voice.

A nurse is caring for a client with end-stage testicular cancer who has been referred to hospice care. Which criterion indicates that the client requires more teaching about hospice care?

The client entered a clinical trial through the National Cancer Institute.

A nurse is developing a teaching plan for a terminally ill client and his family about the stages of dying and emotional reactions experienced. The nurse integrates knowledge of which of the following in the teaching plan?

The stages are applicable to any loss.

Nursing students are reviewing information about attitudes related to death and dying. The students demonstrate understanding of the information when they identify which of the following as most accurate?

There remains a conspiracy of silence about dying despite progress in the area.

Despite having been administered prescribed pain medication, a dying client is still experiencing dyspnea due to fear and anxiety. Which nursing intervention should the nurse use to potentiate the effects of pain medication and help reduce the dyspnea?

Use imagery, humor, and progressive relaxation

A client states, "My children still need me. Why did I get cancer? I am only 30." This client is exhibiting which stage according to Kübler-Ross?

anger

Which term refers to the period of time during which mourning of a loss takes place?

bereavement

A client approaching end-of-life reports dyspnea as being 7 on a scale from 0 to 10. Which action will the nurse take to assist this client?

coach to use purse lip breathing

Which is the initial stage of grief, according to Kübler-Ross?

denial


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