Back of the Book Questions: Theory

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A nurse is preparing medications for a patient. The nurse checks the name of the medication on the label with the name of the medication on the doctor's order. At the bedside the nurse checks the patients name against the medication order as well. The nurse is following which critical thinking attitude? 1. responsibility 2. humility 3. accurate 4. fairness

1

Which of the following describes a nurse's application of a specific knowledge base during critical thinking? (Select all that apply.) 1. Initiative in reading current evidence from the literature 2. Application of nursing theory 3. Reviewing a policy and procedure manual 4. Considering a colleague's view of a patient's needs 5. Previous time caring for a specific group of patients

1,2

A nurse is teaching an older adult patient about ways to detect a melanoma. Which of the following are age-appropriate teaching techniques for this patient? (Select all that apply.) 1. Speak in a low tone. 2. Begin and end the session with the most important information regarding melanoma. 3. Provide a pamphlet about melanoma with large font in blues and greens. 4. Provide specific information in frequent, small amounts for older adult patients. 5. Speak quickly so that you do not take up much of the patient's time.

1,2,4

A nurse completes the following steps during her shift of care. Which are the steps of nursing assessment? (Select all that apply.) 1. The review of patient data in the medical record 2. Confirming a patient's self-report of abdominal pain by inspecting the abdomen 3. Reporting results of an ongoing assessment to a nurse working the next scheduled shift 4. Analyzing a set of signs revealing lower leg weakness and unsteady gait with a pattern of mobility alteration 5. Conducting an interview of a family caregiver

1,2,4,5

The nurse who works at the local hospital is transferring a patient to an acute rehabilitation center in another town. To complete the transfer, information from the patient's electronic health record must be printed and faxed to the acute rehabilitation center. Which of the following actions is most appropriate for the nurse to take to maintain privacy and confidentiality of the patient's information when faxing this information? (Select all that apply.) 1. Confirm that the fax number for the acute rehabilitation center is correct before sending the fax. 2. Use the encryption feature on the fax machine to encode the information and make it impossible for staff at the acute rehabilitation center to read the information unless they have the encryption key. 3. Fax the patient's information without a cover sheet so that the person receiving the information at the acute rehabilitation center can identify it more quickly. 4. After sending the fax, place the information that was printed out in a standard trash can after ripping it into several pieces. 5. After sending the fax, place the information that was printed out in a secure canister marked for shredding.

1,2,5

The nurse is working in an agency that has recently implemented an electronic health record. Which of the following are acceptable practices for maintaining the security and confidentiality of electronic health record information? (Select all that apply.) 1. Using a strong password and changing your password frequently according to agency policy 2. Allowing a temporary staff member to use your computer user name and password to access the electronic record 3. Ensuring that work lists (and any other data that must be printed from the electronic health record) are protected throughout the shift and disposed of in a locked receptacle designated for documents that are to be shredded when no longer needed 4. Ensuring that the patient information that is displayed on the computer monitor that you are using is not visible to visitors and other health care providers who are not involved in that patient's care 5. Remaining logged in to a computer to save time if you only need to step away to administer a medication

1,3,4

Which of the following approaches are recommended when gathering assessment data from an 82-year-old male patient entering a primary care clinic for the first time? (Select all that apply.) 1. Recognize normal changes associated with aging. 2. Avoid direct eye contact. 3. Lean forward and smile as you pose questions. 4. Allow for pauses as patient tells his story. 5. Use the list of questions from the clinic assessment form to complete all data.

1,3,4

one element of clinical decision making is knowing the patient. Which of the following activities affect a nurses ability to know patients better? (select all that apply) 1. caring for similar groups of patients over time 2. reading evidence based practices appropriate to patients 3. learning how patients typically respond to their clinical situations 4. observing patients 5. engaging with patients following illness

1,3,4,5

Match the assessment activity on the left with the type of assessment on the right. 1. Assessment conducted at beginning of a nurse's shift 2. Review of a patient's chief complaint 3. Completion of admitting history at time of patient admission to a hospital 4. Completion of the Long Term Care Minimum Data Set during an elderly patient admission to a nursing home A. Problem focused B. Comprehensive

1A, 2A, 3B, 4B

A patient's cultural background affects the motivation for learning. Using the ACCESS model, match the nursing approach with the correct model component. 1. Assessment 2. Communication 3. Cultural 4. Establishment 5. Sensitivity 6. Safety A. Help patients feel culturally secure and able to maintain their cultural identity. B. Remain aware of verbal and nonverbal responses. C. Be aware of how patients from diverse backgrounds perceive their care needs. D. Become aware of your patient's culture and your own cultural biases. E. Learn about the patient's health beliefs and practices. F. Show respect by creating a caring rapport.

1E, 2B, 3D, 4F, 5C, 6A

a. anticipate how a patient might respond to a treatment b. organize assessment on the basis of patient priorities c. be objective in asking questions of a patient d. be tolerant of the patients views and beliefs 1. open mindedness 2. systematicity 3. truth seeking 4. analyticity

1c, 2d, 3a, 4b

A nurse observes a patient walking down the hall with a shuffling gait. When the patient returns to bed, the nurse checks the strength in both of the patient's legs. The nurse applies the information gained to suspect that the patient has a mobility problem. This conclusion is an example of: 1. Reflection. 2. Clinical inference. 3. Cue. 4. Validation

2

A patient suddenly experiences a severe headache with numbness and decreased movement in the left arm. The emergency room physician suspects a stroke and is going to have the patient undergo an emergent angiogram to remove the clot. Which teaching approach is most appropriate? 1. Selling approach 2. Telling approach 3. Entrusting approach 4. Participating approach

2

The nurse asks a patient the following series of questions: "Describe for me how much you exercise each day." "How do you tolerate the exercise?" "Is the amount of exercise you get each day the same, less, or more than what you did a year ago?" This series of questions would likely occur during which phase of a patient-centered interview? 1. Orientation 2. Working phase 3. Data interpretation 4. Termination

2

The nurse contacts a provider about a change in a patient's condition and receives several new orders for the patient over the phone. When documenting telephone orders in the electronic health record, most hospitals require a nurse to do which of the following? 1. Print out a copy of all telephone orders entered into the electronic health record in order to keep them in personal records for legal purposes. 2. "Read back" all telephone orders to the provider over the phone to verify all orders were heard, understood, and transcribed correctly before entering the orders in the electronic health record. 3. Record telephone orders in the electronic health record, but wait to implement the order(s) until they are electronically signed by the health care provider who gave them. 4. Implement telephone order(s) immediately, but insist that the health care provider come to the patient care unit to personally enter the order(s) into the electronic health record within the next 24 hours

2

A nurse enters a patients room at the beginning of a shift to conduct an assessment of his condition following a blood transfusion. The nurse cared for the patient on the previous day as well. The patient has a number of issues he wishes to share with the nurse, who takes time to explore each issue. The nurse also assesses the patient and finds no signs or symptoms of a reaction to the blood product. The nurse observed the patient the prior day and sees a change in his behavior, a reluctance to get out of bed and ambulate. Which of the following actions improve the nurses ability to make clinical decisions about the patient? (select all that apply) 1. working the same shift each day 2. spending tome during the patient assessment 3. knowing the early mobility protocol guidelines 4. caring for the patient on consecutive days 5. knowing the pattern of the patient behavior about ambulation

2, 4, 5

A nurse is caring for a young patient who has been told he has multiple sclerosis. The nurse has planned time to conduct a teaching session that will focus on the disease and principles of management. The nurse chooses to use the EDUCATE model to proceed with instruction. Which of the following are components of the model? (Select all that apply.) 1. State goals of the session for the patient. 2. Repeat the most important information. 3. Practice empathetic skills. 4. Be aware of nonverbal messages. 5. Use a standard question list for the chosen topic.

2,3,4

A nurse is assigned to care for a woman who is expecting her first child. The nurse organizes herself and plans to gather data about the patient by applying Pender's health promotion model, including the patient's characteristics and experiences and situational influences. She plans to observe patient behavior and consider the patient's psychosocial issues. Such data will offer a clear understanding to help the nurse identify the patient's needs. This is an example of which of the following concepts? (Select all that apply.) 1. Diagnostic reasoning 2. Deductive reasoning 3. Inductive reasoning 4. Assessment 5. Problem solving

2,4

Which of the following scenarios demonstrate that learning has taken place? (Select all that apply.) 1. A patient listens to a nurse's review of the warning signs of a stroke. 2. A patient describes how to set up a pill organizer for newly ordered medicines. 3. A patient attends a spinal cord injury support group. 4. A patient demonstrates how to take his blood pressure at home. 5. A patient reviews written information about resources for cancer survivors

2,4

A nurse is conducting a patient-centered interview. Place the statements from the interview in the correct order, beginning with the first statement a nurse would ask. 1. "You say you've lost weight. Tell me how much weight you've lost in the past month." 2. "My name is Terry. I'll be the nurse taking care of you today." 3. "I have no further questions. Is there anything else you wish to ask me?" 4. "Tell me what brought you to the hospital." 5. "So, to summarize, you've lost about 6 pounds in the past month, and your appetite has been poor—correct?"

2,4,1,5,3

A 63-year-old woman is a family caregiver for her 88-year-old mother who has dementia. The caregiver asked the home health nurse how to manage her mother when she becomes confused and violent. The best instructional method a nurse can use for this situation is: 1. Demonstration 2. Preparatory instruction 3. Role-playing 4. Group instruction with other family caregivers

3

A nurse is preparing to teach a patient who has sleep apnea how to use a CPAP machine at night. Which action is most appropriate for the nurse to perform first? 1. Allow patient to manipulate machine and look at parts. 2. Provide a teach-back session. 3. Set mutual goals for the education session. 4. Discuss the purpose of the machine and how it works

3

A patient recovering from open heart surgery is taught how to cough and deep breathe using a pillow to support or splint the chest incision. Following the teaching session, which of the following is the best way for the nurse to evaluate whether learning has taken place? 1. Verbalization of steps to use in splinting 2. Selecting from a series of flash cards the images showing the correct technique 3. Return demonstration 4. Cloze test

3

A young male patient enters the emergency department with fever and signs of a possible sexually transmitted infection. The nurse enters the patient's cubicle and begins to enter a history on the computer screen. Before beginning the nurse introduces himself and tells the patient all information will be held confidentially. The nurse starts data collection by establishing eye contact with the patient and then looks at the computer prompts to select a series of questions. As the nurse fills out questions on the computer, the patient asks a question about his treatment. The nurse states, "Let me get through these questions first." Which action interferes with the nurse's ability to use connection as a communication skill. 1. Introducing self to patient 2. Using the computer as a prompt for questions 3. Making the nurse's questions a priority 4. Assuring the patient all information is confidential

3

The nurse is administering a dose of metoprolol to a patient, and is completing the steps of bar code medication administration within the EHR. As the bar code information on the medication is scanned, an alert that states "Do not administer dose if apical heart rate (HR) is <60 beats/minute or systolic blood pressure (SBP) is <90 mm Hg" appears on the computer screen. The alert that appeared on the computer screen is an example of what type of system? 1. Electronic health record (EHR) 2. Charting by exception 3. Clinical decision support system (CDSS) 4. Computerized physician order entry (CPOE)

3

When documenting an assessment of a patient's cardiac system in an electronic health record, the nurse uses the computer mouse to select the "WNL" statement to document the following findings: "Heart sounds S1 & S2 auscultated. Heart rate between 80-100 beats per minute, and regular. Denies chest pain." This is an example of using which of the following documentation formats? 1. Focus charting incorporating "Data, Action & Response" (DAR) 2. Problem-intervention-evaluation (PIE) 3. Charting-by-exception (CBE) 4. Narrative documentation

3

the REFLECT model can improve learning after providing patient care. Place the steps of this model in the correct order: 1. Think about your thoughts and actions at the time of the situation 2. Review the knowledge you gained from the experience 3. review the facts of the situation 4. set a schedule for completing your plan of action 5. consider options for handling a similar situation in the future 6. renal any feeling you had at the time of the situation 7. create a plan for future situations

3,1,6,2,5,7,4

A nurse has been caring for a patient with a chronic wound that has not been healing. The nurse talks with a nurse specialist in wound care to find alternative approaches from what the health care provider ordered for dressing the wound. The two decide that because of the patient's allergy to tape a nonallergenic dressing will be used. The nurse obtains an order from the health care provider for the new dressing. After two days there is improvement in the wound. This is an example of which critical thinking standards? (Select all that apply.) 1. Clear 2. Broad 3. Relevant 4. Risk taking 5. Creativity

3,4,5

A nurse initiates a brief interview with a patient who has come to the medical clinic because of self-reported hoarseness, sore throat, and chest congestion. The nurse observes that the patient has a slumped posture and is using intercostal muscles to breathe. The nurse auscultates the patient's lungs and hears crackles in the left lower lobe. The patient's respiratory rate is 20 per minute compared with an average of 16 per minute during previous clinic visits. The patient tells the nurse, "It is hard for me to get a breath." Which of the following data sets are examples of subjective data? (Select all that apply.) 1. Heart rate of 20 per minute and chest congestion 2. Lung sounds revealing crackles and use of intercostal muscles to breathe 3. Patient statement, "It's hard for me to get a breath" 4. Slumped posture and previous respiratory rate of 16 per minute 5. Patient report of sore throat and hoarseness

3,5

A patient asks a nurse to provide instruction on how to perform a breast self-exam. Which domains are required to learn this skill? (Select all that apply.) 1. Affective domain 2. Sensory domain 3. Cognitive domain 4. Attentional domain 5. Psychomotor domain

3,5

Place the following steps of the assessment process in the correct order. 1. Compare data with another source to determine data accuracy. 2. As a pattern forms, probe and frame further questions. 3. Interview a patient, observe behavior, and gather physical assessment findings. 4. Cluster cues that relate together, make inferences, and identify emerging patterns. 5. Differentiate important data from the total data you collect.

3,5,4,2,1

A 55-year-old adult male has been in the hospital over a week following surgical complications. The patient has had limited activity but is now finally ordered to begin a mobility program. The patient just returned from several diagnostic tests and tells the nurse he is feeling quite fatigued. The nurse prepares to instruct the patient on the mobility program protocol. Which of the following learning principles will likely be affected by this patient's condition? 1. Motivation to learn 2. Developmental stage 3. Stage of grief 4. Readiness to learn

4

A nurse has seen many cancer patients struggle with pain management because they are afraid of becoming addicted to the medicine. Pain control is a priority for cancer care. By helping patients focus on their values and beliefs about pain control, a nurse can best make clinical decisions. This is an example of: 1. Creativity. 2. Fairness. 3. Clinical reasoning. 4. Applying ethical criteria.

4

A nurse is caring for a patient who has poor pain control. The patient has a history of opioid abuse. During the day the patient made frequent requests for a pain medication. In order to make an effective clinical decision about this patient, the nurse needs to ask questions about the data available on the patient to make a thorough and thoughtful decision. The nurse asks herself, "How does my view about the patient's pain tolerance compare with the patient's, and does that pose a problem?" This is an example of: 1. A question about assumptions. 2. A question about evidence. 3. A question about procedure. 4. A question about perspective

4

The nurse is changing the dressing over the midline incision of a patient who had surgery. Assessment of the incision reveals changes from what was documented by the previous nurse. After documenting the current wound assessment, the nurse contacts the surgeon (Dr. Oakman) by telephone to discuss changes in the incision that are of concern. Which of the following illustrates the most appropriate way for the nurse to document this conversation? 1. Health care provider notified about change in assessment of abdominal incision. T. Wright, RN 2. 09-3-18: Notified Dr. Oakman by phone that there is a new area of redness around the patient's incision. T. Wright, RN 3. 1015: Contacted Dr. Oakman and notified about changes in abdominal incision. T. Wright, RN 4. 09-3-18 (1015): Dr. Oakman contacted by phone. Notified about new area of bright red erythema extending approximately 1 inch around circumference of midline abdominal incision and oral temperature of 101.5 F. No orders received. T. Wright, RN

4

The nurse is discussing the advantages of using computerized provider order entry (CPOE) with a nursing colleague. Which statement best describes the major advantage of a CPOE system within an electronic health record? 1. CPOE reduces the time necessary for health care providers to write orders. 2. CPOE reduces the time needed for nurses to communicate with health care providers. 3. Nurses do not need to acknowledge orders entered by CPOE in an electronic health record. 4. CPOE improves patient safety by reducing transcription errors.

4

The nurse is reviewing health care provider orders that were handwritten on paper when all computers were down during a system upgrade. Which of the following orders contain an inappropriate abbreviation included on The Joint Commission's "Do Not Use" list and should be clarified with the health care provider? 1. Change open midline abdominal incision daily using wet-to-moist normal saline and gauze. 2. Lorazepam 0.5 mg PO every 4 hours prn anxiety 3. Morphine sulfate 1 mg IVP every 2 hours prn severe pain 4. Insulin aspart 8u SQ every morning before breakfast

4

In preparing to collect a nursing history for a patient admitted for elective surgery, which of the following data are part of the review of present illness in the nursing health history? 1. Current medications 2. Patient expectations of planned surgery 3. Review of patient's family support system 4. History of allergies 5. Patient's explanation for what might be the cause of symptoms that require surgery

5

The nurse is writing a narrative progress note. Identify each of the following statements as subjective data (S) or objective data (O): 1. April 24, 2019 (0900) 2. Repositioned patient on left side. 3. Medicated with hydrocodone-acetaminophen 5/325 mg, 2 tablets PO. 4. "The pain in my incision increases every time I try to turn on my right side." 5. S. Eastman, RN 6. Surgical incision right lower quadrant, 3 inches in length, well approximated, sutures intact, no drainage 7. Rates pain 7/10 at location of surgical incision.

O: 1,2,3,5,6,7 S: 4


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