Peds: Chapter 2

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The nurse is teaching parents about the effects of media on childhood obesity. The nurse realizes the parents understand the teaching if they make which statements?

"Advertising of unhealthy food can increase snacking." "Increased screen time may be related to unhealthy sleep." "There is a link between the amount of screen time and obesity."

The nurse is discussing parenting in reconstituted families with a new stepparent. The nurse is aware that the new stepparent understands the teaching when which statement is made?

"I realize there may be power conflicts bringing two households together." Rationale: The entry of a stepparent into a ready-made family requires adjustments for all family members. Power conflicts are expected, and flexibility, mutual support, and open communication are critical in successful relationships.

A mother brings 6-month-old Eric to the clinic for a well-baby checkup. She comments, "I want to go back to work, but I don't want Eric to suffer because I'll have less time with him." Which is the nurse's most appropriate answer?

"Let's talk about the child care options that will be best for Eric." Rationale: Asking the mother about child care options is an open-ended statement that will assist the mother in exploring her concerns about what is best for both her and Eric.

Parents of a preschool child ask the nurse, "Should we set rules for our child as part of a discipline plan?" Which is an accurate response by the nurse?

"Set clear and reasonable rules and expect the same behavior regardless of the circumstances." Rationale:Nurses can help parents establish realistic and concrete "rules." The clearer the limits that are set and the more consistently they are enforced, the less need there is for disciplinary action.

The nurse is discussing issues that are important with parents considering a cross-racial adoption. Which statement made by the parents indicates further teaching is needed?

"We are glad we will be getting full medical information when we adopt our child." Rationale: In international adoptions, the medical information the parents receive may be incomplete or sketchy; weight, height, and head circumference are often the only objective information present in the child's medical record.

Children may believe that they are responsible for their parents' divorce and interpret the separation as punishment. At which age is this most likely to occur?

4 years old. Rationale: Preschool-age children are most likely to blame themselves for the divorce. A 4-year-old child will fear abandonment and express bewilderment regarding all human relationships. A 4-year-old child has magical thinking and believes his or her actions cause consequences, such as divorce. For infants, divorce may increase their irritability and interfere with the attachment process, but they are too young to feel responsibility. School-age children will have feelings of deprivation, including the loss of a parent, attention, money, and a secure future. Adolescents are able to disengage themselves from the parental conflict.

A parent of a school-age child tells the school nurse that the parents are going through a divorce. The child has not been doing well in school and sometimes has trouble sleeping. The nurse should recognize this as what?

A common reaction to divorce. Rationale: Parental divorce affects school-age children in many ways. In addition to difficulties in school, they often have profound sadness, depression, fear, insecurity, frequent crying, loss of appetite, and sleep disorders.

The nurse is planning care for a patient with a different ethnic background. Which should be an appropriate goal?

Adapt, as necessary, ethnic practices to health needs. Rationale: Whenever possible, nurses should facilitate the integration of ethnic practices into health care provision. The ethnic background is part of the individual; it should be difficult to eliminate the influence of ethnic background. The ethnic practices need to be evaluated within the context of the health care setting to determine whether they are conflicting.

Gender

An individual's self-identification as man or woman

Which type of family should the nurse recognize when a mother, her children, and a stepfather live together?

Blended Rationale: A blended family contains at least one stepparent, stepsibling, or half-sibling.

The nurse is teaching a group of new nursing graduates about identifiable qualities of strong families that help them function effectively. Which quality should be included in the teaching?

Clear set of family values, rules, and beliefs Rationale: A clear set of family rules, values, and beliefs that establish expectations about acceptable and desired behavior is one of the qualities of strong families that help them function effectively.

The nurse is presenting a staff development program about understanding culture in the health care encounter. Which components should the nurse include in the program?

Cultural humility, cultural sensitivity, and cultural competency. Rationale: Cultural competence tends to promote building information about a specific culture. Cultural sensitivity, a second way of understanding culture in the context of the clinical encounter, may be understood as a way of using one's knowledge, consideration, understanding, respect, and tailoring after realizing awareness of self and others and encountering a diverse group or individual. Cultural humility, the third component, is a commitment and active engagement in a lifelong process that individuals enter into for an ongoing basis with patients, communities, colleagues, and themselves.

The nurse discovers welts on the back of a Vietnamese child during a home health visit. The child's mother says she has rubbed the edge of a coin on her child's oiled skin. The nurse should recognize this as what?

Cultural practice to rid the body of disease Rationale: This is descriptive of coining. The welts are created by repeatedly rubbing a coin on the child's oiled skin. The mother is attempting to rid the child's body of disease. Coining is a cultural healing practice.

What family theory is described as a series of tasks for the family throughout its life span?

Developmental theory Rationale: In developmental systems theory, the family is described as a small group, a semiclosed system of personalities that interact with the larger cultural system. Changes do not occur in one part of the family without changes in others. Exchange theory assumes that humans, families, and groups seek rewarding statuses so that rewards are maximized while costs are minimized. Structural-functional theory states that the family performs at least one societal function while also meeting family needs. Symbolic interactional theory describes the family as a unit of interacting persons with each occupying a position within the family.

Race

Distinguishes humans by physical traits

The sharing of common characteristics that differentiates one group from other groups in a society is?

Ethnicity Rationale: Ethnicity is a classification aimed at grouping individuals who consider themselves, or are considered by others, to share common characteristics that differentiate them from the other collectivities in a society, and from which they develop their distinctive cultural behavior. Race is a term that groups together people by their outward physical appearance. Culture is a pattern of assumptions, beliefs, and practices that unconsciously frames or guides the outlook and decisions of a group of people. A culture is composed of individuals who share a set of values, beliefs, and practices that serve as a frame of reference for individual perception and judgments. Superiority is the state or quality of being superior; it does not apply to ethnicity.

The nurse is aware that if patients' different cultures are implied to be inferior, the emotional attitude the nurse is displaying is what?

Ethnocentrism Rationale: Ethnocentrism is the belief that one's way of living and behaving is the best way. This includes the emotional attitude that the values, beliefs, and perceptions of one's ethnic group are superior to those of others. Acculturation is the gradual changes that are produced in a culture by the influence of another culture that cause one or both cultures to become more similar. The minority culture is forced to learn the majority culture to survive. Cultural shock is the helpless feeling and state of disorientation felt by an outsider attempting to adapt to a different culture group. Cultural sensitivity, a component of culturally competent care, is an awareness of cultural similarities and differences.

Which type of family should the nurse recognize when the paternal grandmother, the parents, and two minor children live together?

Extended Rationale: An extended family contains at least one parent, one or more children, and one or more members (related or unrelated) other than a parent or sibling.

Which family theory explains how families react to stressful events and suggests factors that promote adaptation to these events?

Family Stress theory Rationale: Family stress theory explains the reaction of families to stressful events. In addition, the theory helps suggest factors that promote adaptation to the stress. Stressors, both positive and negative, are cumulative and affect the family. Adaptation requires a change in family structure or interaction.

The school nurse understands that children are impacted by divorce. Which has the most impact on the positive outcome of a divorce?

Family characteristics Rationale: Family characteristics are more crucial to the child's well-being during a divorce than specific child characteristics, such as age or sex.

The nurse is planning to counsel family members as a group to assess the family's group dynamics. Which theoretic family model is the nurse using as a framework?

Family systems theory Rationale: In family systems theory, the family is viewed as a system that continually interacts with its members and the environment. The emphasis is on the interaction between the members; a change in one family member creates a change in other members, which in turn results in a new change in the original member. Assessing the family's group dynamics is an example of using this theory as a framework.

A foster parent is talking to the nurse about the health care needs for the child who has been placed in the parent's care. Which statement best describes the health care needs of foster children?

Foster children tend to have a higher than normal incidence of acute and chronic health problems. Rationale: Children who are placed in foster care have a higher incidence of acute and chronic health problems and may experience feelings of isolation and confusion; therefore, they should be monitored closely.

Social class

Incorporates levels of education, occupation, income, and access to resources

Which is a consequence of the physical punishment of children, such as spanking?

Misbehavior is likely to occur when parents are not present. Rationale: Through the use of physical punishment, children learn what they should not do. When parents are not around, it is more likely that children will misbehave because they have not learned to behave well for their own sake but rather out of fear of punishment. Spanking can cause severe physical and psychologic injury and interfere with effective parent-child interaction. The use of corporal punishment may interfere with the child's development of moral reasoning. Children do become accustomed to spanking, requiring more severe corporal punishment each time.

When discussing discipline with the mother of a 4-year-old child, which should the nurse include?

Parental control should be consistent. Rationale: For effective discipline, parents must be consistent and must follow through with agreed-on actions.

The nurse understands that children's role are primarily shaped by what member of the family?

Parents Rationale: Children's roles are shaped primarily by the parents, who apply direct or indirect pressures to induce or force children into the desired patterns of behavior or direct their efforts toward modification of the role responses of the child on a mutually acceptable basis.

An adolescent that comes from a large family is most likely to relate most to?

Peers Rationale: Adolescents from a large family are more peer oriented than family oriented. Adolescents in small families identify more strongly with their parents and rely more on them for advice.

When assessing a family, the nurse determines that the parents exert little or no control over their children. This style of parenting is called which?

Permissive Rationale: Permissive parents avoid imposing their own standards of conduct and allow their children to regulate their own activity as much as possible. The parents exert little or no control over their children's actions. Dictatorial or authoritarian parents attempt to control their children's behavior and attitudes through unquestioned mandates. They establish rules and regulations or standards of conduct that they expect to be followed rigidly and unquestioningly. Democratic/authoritative parents combine permissive and dictatorial styles. They direct their children's behavior and attitudes by emphasizing the reasons for rules and negatively reinforcing deviations. They respect their children's individual natures.

Ethnicity

Persons who have unique cultural, social, and linguistic heritage

Socialization

Process by which society communicates its competencies, values, and expectations

Which describe the feelings and behaviors of early preschool children related to divorce?

Regressive behavior, fear of abandonment, and blame themselves for the divorce. Rationale: Fear regarding the future and intense desire for reconciliation of parents is a reaction later school-age children have to divorce.

After the family, which has the greatest influence on providing continuity between generations?

School Rationale: Schools convey a tremendous amount of culture from the older members to the younger members of society. They prepare children to carry out the traditional social roles that will be expected of them as adults.

The parents of a young child ask the nurse for suggestions about discipline. When discussing the use of time-outs, which should the nurse include?

Select an area that is safe and nonstimulating, such as a hallway. Rationale: The area must be nonstimulating and safe. The child becomes bored in this environment and then changes behavior to rejoin activities. The child's room may have toys and activities that negate the effect of being separated from the family. The general rule is 1 minute per year of age. An hour per year is excessive. When the child cries, refuses, or is more disruptive, the time-out does not start; the time-out begins when the child quiets.

The parents of a 5-year-old child ask the nurse how they can minimize misbehavior. Which responses should the nurse give?

Set clear and reasonable goals, praise your child for desirable behavior, teach desirable behavior through your own example. Rationale: Parents should call attention to unacceptable behavior as soon as it begins and provide children with opportunities for power and control.

Children are taught the values of their culture through observation and feedback relative to their own behavior. In teaching a class on cultural competence, the nurse should be aware that which factor may be culturally determined?

Status Rationale: Status is culturally determined and varies according to each culture. Some cultures ascribe higher status to age or socioeconomic position. Social roles also are influenced by the culture. Ethnicity is an affiliation of a set of persons who share a unique cultural, social, and linguistic heritage. It is one component of culture. Race and culture are two distinct attributes. Whereas racial grouping describes transmissible traits, culture is determined by the pattern of assumptions, beliefs, and practices that unconsciously frames or guides the outlook and decisions of a group of people. Cultural development may be limited by geographic boundaries, but the boundaries are not culturally determined.

A 3-year-old child was adopted immediately after birth. The parents have just asked the nurse how they should tell the child that she is adopted. Which guideline concerning adoption should the nurse use in planning a response?

Telling the child is an important aspect of their parental responsibilities. Rationale: It is important for the parents not to withhold information about the adoption from the child. It is an essential component of the child's identity.

A Hispanic toddler has pneumonia. The nurse notices that the parent consistently feeds the child only the broth that comes on the clear liquid tray. Food items, such as Jell-O, Popsicles, and juices, are left. Which statement best explains this?

The parent is trying to restore normal balance through appropriate "hot" remedies. Rationale: In several cultures, including Filipino, Chinese, Arabic, and Hispanic, hot and cold describe certain properties completely unrelated to temperature. Respiratory conditions such as pneumonia are "cold" conditions and are treated with "hot" foods.

Which is an accurate description of homosexual (or gay-lesbian) families?

The quality of parenting is equivalent to that of nongay parents. Rationale: Although gay or lesbian families may be different from heterosexual families, the environment can be as healthy as any other.

How is family systems theory best described?

When the family system is disrupted, change can occur at any point in the system. Rationale: Family systems theory describes an interactional model. Any change in one member will create change in others. Although the family is the sum of the individual members, family systems theory focuses on the number of dyad interactions that can occur. The interactions, not the individual members, are considered to be the problem.

Which describe the feelings and behaviors of adolescents related to divorce?

disturbed concept of sexuality, withdraw from family/friends, worry about themselves, parents,siblings, and expression of anger, sadness, shame, or embarrassment..

The authoritative parenting style can lead to what child behavior?

self-reliance Rationale: Children raised by parents with an authoritative parenting style tend to have high self-esteem and are self-reliant, assertive, inquisitive, content, and highly interactive with other children. Children raised by parents with an authoritarian parenting style tend to be sensitive, shy, self-conscious, retiring, and submissive.


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