320- Fundamentals 1 Quiz

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A nurse in an oncology clinic is assessing a client who is undergoing treatment for ovarian cancer. Which of the following statements by the client indicates she is experiencing psychological distress?

"I keep having nightmares about my upcoming surgery." Nightmares and sleep disturbances are manifestations of anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder. These indicate that the client is at risk for experiencing psychological distress.

A nurse is providing teaching to an older adult client who has constipation. Which of the following statements should the nurse include in the teaching?

"Sit on the toilet 30 minutes after eating a meal." Increased peristalsis occurs after food enters the stomach. Sitting on the toilet 30 min after eating a meal, regardless of feeling the urge to defecate, is a recommended method of bowel retraining to treat constipation. note: - minimum of 1,500 mL of fluid to prevent constipation. - increase consumption of coarse-fiber and whole grains,

A nurse is caring for a client who has type 1 diabetes mellitus and is resistant to learning self-injection of insulin. Which of the following statements should the nurse make?

"Tell me what I can do to help you overcome your fear of giving yourself injections." This response illustrates the therapeutic communication technique of clarifying and offering of self. It is important for the nurse to allow the client to express feelings and fears and to support the client in learning how to give the injections.

A nurse is caring for an older adult client who becomes agitated when the nurse requests that the client's dentures be removed prior to surgery. Which of the following responses should the nurse make?

"What worries you about being without your teeth?" This response by the nurse is therapeutic because it validates the client's feelings of agitation and seeks a reason for it. Address patient's feelings/concerns

A nurse on a medical-surgical unit is admitting a client. Which of the following information should the nurse document in the client's record first?

Assessment When caring for this client, the nurse should apply the nursing process priority-setting framework. The nurse can use the nursing process to plan client care and prioritize nursing actions. Each step of the nursing process builds on the previous step, beginning with assessment or data collection. Before the nurse can formulate a plan of action, implement a nursing intervention, or notify a provider of a change in the client's status, he must first collect adequate data from the client. Assessing or collecting additional data will provide the nurse with knowledge to make an appropriate decision.

A nurse is inserting an IV catheter for a client that results in a blood spill on her gloved hand. The client has no documented bloodstream infection. Which of the following actions should the nurse take?

Carefully remove the gloves and follow with hand hygiene. Standard precautions require the use of gloves and hand hygiene in the care of all clients.

A nurse is measuring vital signs for a client and notices an irregularity in the pulse. Which of the following actions should the nurse take?

Count the apical pulse rate for 1 full minute, and describe the rhythm in the chart. If the peripheral pulse is irregular, the nurse should auscultate the apical pulse for 60 seconds to obtain an accurate rate. The nurse should document the irregularity in the client's medical record.

A nurse is caring for a client who is unstable and has vital signs measured every 15 minutes by an electronic blood pressure machine. The nurse notices the machine begins to measure the blood pressure at varied intervals and the readings are inconsistent. Which of the following actions should the nurse take?

Disconnect the machine, and measure the blood pressure manually every 15 min. If the nurse questions the reliability of the monitoring equipment, a manual process should be used. Also, malfunctioning equipment can pose a safety risk for the client, so it must be tagged and removed.

A nurse is caring for a client who has a terminal illness. The client asks several questions about the nurse's religious beliefs related to death and dying. Which of the following actions should the nurse take?

Encourage the client to express his thoughts about death and dying. The nurse should recognize the client's need to talk about impending death, and encourage the client to discuss his thoughts on the subject. This is the therapeutic technique of reflecting. Depending on the situation, the nurse can also share some thoughts on this topic. Self-disclosure is a communication skill that can help open lines of communication when appropriate. If the nurse does not want to share personal beliefs, the communication skills of offering self and listening to the client's thoughts are appropriate.

A nurse in an emergency department is assessing a client who reports diarrhea and decreased urination for 4 days. Which of the following actions should the nurse take to assess the client's skin turgor?

Grasp a skin fold on the chest under the clavicle, release it, and note whether it springs back. The nurse should use this technique for assessing skin turgor. If the client has good turgor and is properly hydrated, the skin will immediately return to normal; with dehydration, the skin will remain tented. The nurse can also assess turgor by grasping a skin fold on the back of the forearm.

A nurse is preparing a client who is scheduled for a hysterectomy for transport to the operating room when the client states she no longer wants to have the surgery. Which of the following actions should the nurse take?

Notify the provider about the client's decision. Acting as the client advocate, the nurse should support the client in her decision and notify the provider.

A nurse on a medical-surgical unit is caring for a client. Which of the following actions should the nurse take first when using the nursing process?

Obtain client information. The nursing process is based on the scientific process. The first step in the scientific process is the collection of data. Therefore, the first step in the nursing process is assessing and obtaining information about the client.

A charge nurse is observing a newly licensed nurse perform tracheostomy care for a client. Which of the following actions by the newly licensed nurse requires intervention?

Obtaining cotton balls for the tracheostomy care Cotton ball particles can be aspirated into the tracheostomy opening, possibly causing a tracheal abscess. The charge nurse should intervene for this action. note: - Half-strength peroxide solution is used to clean the inner cannula.

A nurse is preparing to provide tracheostomy care for a client. Which of the following actions should the nurse take first?

Perform hand hygiene. According to evidence-based practice, the nurse should first perform hand hygiene before touching the client or performing any skills, such as tracheostomy care. This is vital because contamination of the nurse's hands is a primary source of infection.

A nurse is obtaining the blood pressure in a client's lower extremity. Which of the following actions should the nurse take?

Place the bladder of the cuff over the posterior aspect of the thigh. This is the correct position for the nurse to place the bladder of the cuff when measuring a lower extremity blood pressure. note: - The nurse should position the cuff 2.5 cm (1 in) above the popliteal artery. - measure with patient in prone position - The nurse should auscultate for the blood pressure at the popliteal artery.

A nurse is caring for an older adult client who is violent and attempting to disconnect her IV lines. The provider prescribes soft wrist restraints. Which of the following actions should the nurse take while the client is in restraints?

Remove the restraints one at a time. The nurse should remove one restraint at a time for a client who is violent or noncompliant. Checked every 2 hours.

A community health nurse is preparing a campaign about seasonal influenza. Which of the following plans should the nurse include as a secondary prevention?

Screening groups of older adults in nursing care facilities for early influenza manifestations. Screening older adults who have some manifestations of illness to determine if they have influenza is an example of secondary prevention. Secondary prevention is focused on preventing complications of an illness or providing care to prevent illness from becoming severe. note: - Administering influenza immunizations is an example of primary prevention for people who are healthy but in danger of becoming ill - Educating clients about the dangers of influenza is an example of primary prevention for people who are healthy but in danger of becoming ill - Finding rehabilitation programs for older adults who have complications from influenza is an example of tertiary prevention

A nurse at a screening clinic is assessing a client who reports a history of a heart murmur related to aortic valve stenosis. At which of the following anatomical areas should the nurse place the stethoscope to auscultate the aortic valve?

Second intercostal space to the right of the sternum The aortic valve is located in the second intercostal space to the right of the sternum. Aortic stenosis produces a midsystolic ejection murmur that can be heard clearly at the aortic area with the client leaning forward. note: - The tricuspid valve is located in the fifth intercostal space to the left of the sternum. - The pulmonic valve is located in the second intercostal space to the left of the sternum. - The mitral valve is located in the fifth intercostal space just medial to the midclavicular line.

A nurse is demonstrating postoperative deep breathing and coughing exercises to a client who will have emergency surgery for appendicitis. Which of the following statements indicates a lack of readiness to learn by the client?

The client reports severe pain. A client who is experiencing severe pain is not able to concentrate and therefore, is not ready to learn a new activity.

A nurse is providing teaching to a client who has heart failure about how to reduce his daily intake of sodium. Which of the following factors is the most important in determining the client's ability to learn new dietary habits?

The involvement of the client in planning the change According to evidence-based practice, client involvement in planning dietary changes is the most important factor in the client's ability to learn new habits.

A nurse on a medical-surgical unit is washing her hands prior to assisting with a surgical procedure. Which of the following actions by the nurse demonstrates proper surgical hand-washing technique?

The nurse washes with her hands held higher than her elbows. The nurse who is performing a surgical hand-washing technique should wash with her hands held higher than the elbows so that water and soapsuds can drain away from the clean area toward the dirty area. note: Surgical scrubbing requires the nails be scrubbed with 15 strokes and each other part of the hand with 10 strokes.

A nurse is providing preoperative teaching to a client who is scheduled for arthroplasty in the next month that might require a blood transfusion. The client expresses concern about the risk of acquiring an infection from the blood transfusion. Which of the following statements should the nurse make to the client?

"Donate autologous blood before the surgery." Autologous blood transfusion is the collection and reinfusion of the client's blood. With preoperative autologous blood donation, the blood is drawn from the client 3 to 5 weeks before an elective surgical procedure and stored for transfusion at the time of the surgery. Autologous blood is the safest form of blood transfusion because exclusive use of a client's own blood eliminates exposure to transfusion-transmitted infection.

A nurse is teaching a group of older adults about expected changes of aging. Which of the following statements by a group member indicates that the teaching has been effective?

"I should expect my heart rate to take longer to return to normal after exercise as I get older." Older adults experience decreased cardiac output, which causes increased pulse rate during exercise. The pulse rate also takes longer to return to normal after exercise.

A nurse is teaching an assistive personnel (AP) about proper hand hygiene. Which of the following statements by the AP indicates an understanding of the teaching?

"There are times I should use soap and water rather than an alcohol-based hand rub to clean my hands." While alcohol-based hand rubs are as effective as soap and water in providing proper hand hygiene, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention recommends washing hands with soap and water at certain times, such as when the hands are visibly soiled with dirt or body fluids. note: - Drying should be performed from the cleanest area (fingertips) to the least clean area (forearms) to prevent contamination of the newly cleaned hands.

A nurse observes an assistive personnel (AP) preparing to obtain blood pressure with a regular size cuff for a client who is obese. Which of the following explanations should the nurse give the AP?

"Using a cuff that is too small will result in an inaccurately high reading." Blood pressure cuffs come in various sizes, and the correct size cuff is necessary to obtain a reliable measurement. Blood pressure readings can be falsely high if the cuff is too small for the client. note: - The width of the cuff bladder should be 40% of the circumference of the client's arm.

A nurse is performing an abdominal assessment for an adult client. Identify the correct sequence of steps for this assessment. (Move the sequence of steps into the box on the right, placing them in the selected order of performance. Use all the steps.)

1. INSPECT 2. ASSCULATE 3. PERCUSS 4. PALPATE "I ATE PERFECT PASRA" The appropriate sequence for the nurse to perform the abdominal assessment is to inspect, auscultate, percuss, and then palpate. This sequence prevents altering the bowel sounds and causing false results. note: The appropriate sequence for any other assessment for an adult client is inspection, palpation, percussion, and auscultation. INS, PAL, PER, AUS

A nurse is caring for a client who is postoperative and has paralytic ileus. Which of the following abdominal assessments should the nurse expect?

Absent bowel sounds with distention Paralytic ileus is an immobile bowel. With this disorder, bowel sounds are absent and the abdomen is distended.

A nurse is caring for a child who is postoperative following a tonsillectomy. Which of the following actions should the nurse take?

Administer analgesics to the child on a routine schedule throughout the day and night. To soothe the client's throat following a tonsillectomy, the nurse should administer pain medication routinely around the clock. The nurse can provide the medication rectally or intravenously to avoid the oral route. note: - The child should be discouraged from coughing or clearing the throat following a tonsillectomy because these actions can contribute to bleeding. - no ice cream or dairy products - The nurse should offer an ice collar, not a heating pad, to ease the child's pain.

A nurse is planning weight loss strategies for a group of clients who are obese. Which of the following actions by the nurse will improve the clients' commitment to a long-term goal of weight loss?

Attempt to increase the clients' self-motivation. Motivation to learn is important in improving a client's committment to achievement of a health goal, as well as increasing the amount and speed of learning.

A charge nurse is teaching adult cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) to a group of newly licensed nurses. Which of the following actions should the charge nurse teach as the first response in CPR?

Confirm unresponsiveness. The nurse should apply the nursing process priority-setting framework. The nurse can use the nursing process to plan client care and prioritize nursing actions. Each step of the nursing process builds on the previous step, beginning with assessment or data collection. Before the nurse can formulate a plan of action, implement a nursing intervention, or notify a provider of a change in the client's status, she must first collect adequate data from the client. Assessing or collecting additional data will provide the nurse with knowledge to make an appropriate decision. Establishing unresponsiveness is required before beginning CPR. If a client is unresponsive, the nurse should activate the emergency response team.

A nurse is admitting a client who has decreased circulation in his left leg. Which of the following actions should the nurse take first?

Evaluate pedal pulses. For a client who has decreased circulation in the leg, evaluating pedal pulses is critical in order to determine adequate blood supply to the foot. The nurse should apply the safety and risk reduction priority-setting framework. This framework assigns priority to the factor posing the greatest safety risk to the client. When there are several risks to client safety, the one posing the greatest threat is the highest priority. The nurse should use Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, the ABC priority-setting framework, or nursing knowledge to identify which risk poses the greatest threat to the client.

A nurse is caring for a client who requires a chest x-ray. Prior to the client being transported for the procedure, which of the following actions should the nurse take first?

Identify the client using two identifiers. The nurse should apply the safety and risk reduction priority-setting framework. This framework assigns priority to the factor or situation posing the greatest safety risk to the client. When there are several risks to client safety, the one posing the greatest threat is the highest priority. The nurse should use Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, the ABC priority-setting framework, or nursing knowledge to identify which risk poses the greatest threat to the client. Once the client's identity is determined, the nurse can then proceed with the other options. This action is the priority action because it provides for the safety of the client. It is a nursing responsibility to be certain that each client receives only what has been prescribed. The nurse must assure that the correct client is being transported for a chest x-ray.

A nurse is receiving a client from the PACU who is postoperative following abdominal surgery. Which of the following actions should the nurse take to transfer the client from the stretcher to the bed?

Lock the wheels on the bed and stretcher. Locking the wheels prevents the client from falling to the floor by not allowing the cart or bed to move apart or away from the client. note: - The nurse should ask the client to cross his arms across his chest to prevent injuring the arms during the transfer. - Logrolling is a technique used to prevent injury when moving a client who requires immobilization of the neck, back, or spine.

A nurse is assessing the heart sounds of a client who has developed chest pain that becomes worse with inspiration. The nurse auscultates a high-pitched scratching sound during both systole and diastole with the diaphragm of the stethoscope positioned at the left sternal border. Which of the following heart sounds should the nurse document?

Pericardial friction rub A pericardial friction rub has a high-pitched scratching, grating, or squeaking leathery sound heard best with the diaphragm of the stethoscope at the left sternal border. A pericardial friction rub is a manifestation of pericardial inflammation and can be heard with infective pericarditis with myocardial infarction, following cardiac surgery or trauma, and with some autoimmune problems, such as rheumatic fever. The client who develops pericarditis typically has chest pain which becomes worse with inspiration or coughing and which may be relieved by sitting up and leaning forward. note: - Third heart sound is a low-pitched sound after the second heart sound - Murmur has a swishing or a whistling sound.

A nurse on a rehabilitation unit is preparing to transfer a client who is unable to walk from a bed to a wheelchair. Which of the following techniques should the nurse use?

Place the wheelchair at a 45° angle to the bed. Positioning the wheelchair at a 45° allows the client to pivot, lessening the amount of rotation required. note: - Safely transferring a client from a bed to a wheelchair requires the nurse to stand in front of the client toward the side that requires the most support. This technique will help maintain balance during the transfer.

A nurse is preparing to perform mouth care for an unresponsive client. Which of the following actions should the nurse plan to take?

Raise the level of the bed. The nurse should raise the bed to allow for the use of proper body mechanics and reduce the risk of self-injury. note: - the nurse should raise the client's head to 30° or turn the client to a side-lying position. -To prevent the risk of care-giver injury, the nurse should never insert fingers into the mouth of an unresponsive client.

A nurse is caring for a client who is in the terminal stage of cancer. Which of the following actions should the nurse take when she observes the client crying?

Sit and hold the client's hand. With this action, the nurse uses the therapeutic communication techniques of silence, touch, and offering of self to the client.

A nurse is planning care for a client who reports abdominal pain. An assessment by the nurse reveals the client has a temperature of 39.2° C (102.6° F), heart rate of 105/min, a soft nontender abdomen, and menses overdue by 2 days. Which of the following findings should be the nurse's priority?

Temperature Elevated temperature is an emergent physiological need, which requires priority intervention by the nurse. The nurse should consider Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, which includes five levels of priority. The first level consists of physiological needs; the second level consists of safety and security needs; the third level consists of love and belonging needs; the fourth level consists of personal achievement and self-esteem needs; and the fifth level consists of achieving full potential and the ability to problem solve and cope with life situations. When applying Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, the nurse should review physiological needs first. The nurse should then address the client's needs by following the remaining four hierarchal levels. However, it is important for the nurse to consider all contributing client factors, as higher levels of the pyramid can compete with those at the lower levels, depending on the situation.

A nurse is planning to obtain the vital signs of a 2-year-old child who is experiencing diarrhea and who might have a right ear infection. Which of the following routes should the nurse use to obtain the temperature?

Temporal The temporal artery route, while not as accurate as the rectal route for obtaining a precise body temperature, is noninvasive and can be used to obtain a temperature in a toddler who might have an ear infection and who is having diarrhea. The nurse should place the probe behind the ear if the client is diaphoretic, but should avoid placing it over an area covered with hair. note: - The oral route is not appropriate for use with children under the age of 3.

A nurse is witnessing a client sign an informed consent form for surgery. Which of the following describes what the nurse is affirming by this action?

The signature on the preoperative consent form is the client's. The nurse acts as a witness to attest that it is the client's signature on the preoperative consent form. It is the responsibility of the provider who will perform the procedure to obtain consent by explaining the procedure along with the associated risks and benefits. note: - It is the responsibility of the provider who will perform the procedure to inform the client about the risks and benefits and to obtain consent.


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