Foundations Exam 2 Review - End of Chapter Questions

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Annie seeks the help of the nurse in the student health clinic because she suspects that her roommate, Angela, suffered date rape. She is concerned because Angela chose not to report the rape and does not seem to be coping well. (1) After talking with Annie, the nurse learns that although Angela blurted out that she had been raped when she first came home, since then she has refused verbalization about the rape ("I don't want to think or talk about it"), has stopped attending all college social activities (a marked change in behavior), and seems to be having nightmares. After analyzing the data, the nurse believes that Angela might be experiencing (2) rape-trauma syndrome: silent reaction. Fortunately, Angela trusts Annie and is willing to come to the student health center for help. A conversation with Angela confirms the nurse's suspicions, and problem identification begins. The nurse talks further with Angela (3) to develop some treatment goals and formulate outcomes. The nurse also begins to think about the types of nursing interventions most likely to yield the desired outcomes. In the initial meeting with Angela, (4) the nurse encourages her expression of feelings and helps her to identify personal coping strategies and strengths. The nurse and Angela decide to meet in 1 week (5) to assess her progress toward achieving targeted outcomes. If she is not making progress,

(1) is an illustration of assessing: the collection of patient data. (2) is an illustration of the identification of a nursing diagnosis: a health problem that independent nursing intervention can resolve. (3) is an illustration of planning: outcome identification and related nursing interventions. (4) is an illustration of implementing: carrying out the plan of care. (5) is an illustration of evaluating: measuring the extent to which Angela has achieved targeted outcomes.

When developing the plan of care for a patient with chronic pain, the nurse plans interventions based on the knowledge that chronic pain is most effectively relieved when analgesics are administered in what matter?

. The PRN protocol is totally inadequate for patients experiencing chronic pain. ATC doses of analgesics are more effective, whereas conservative pain management for whatever reason may also prove ineffective. Intramuscular administration is not practical on a long-range basis for a patient with chronic pain.

A nurse is helping an overweight female patient to devise a meal plan to lose 2 pounds per week. How many calories would the patient need to delete per day in order to accomplish this goal?

1000 = 1 lb (0.45 kg) of body fat equals about 3,500 cal. Therefore, to gain or lose 1 lb (0.45 kg) in a week, daily calorie intake should be increased or decreased, respectively, by 500 cal (3,500 cal divided by 7 days = 500 cal/day). Similarly, a weight gain or loss of 2 lb (0.9 kg) per week would require an adjustment of 1,000 cal/day.

1. A nurse is calculating the body mass index (BMI) of a 35-year-old male patient who is extremely obese. The patient's height is 5′6″ and his current weight is 325 pounds. What would the nurse document as his BMI?

52.4 BMI=weight / height x height X703

A nurse performs presurgical assessments of patients in an ambulatory care center. Which patient would the nurse report to the surgeon as possibly needing surgery to be postponed?

A patient taking gingko biloba (an herbal), aspirin, and vitamin E (dietary supplement) may have to have surgery postponed due to an increased risk for excessive bleeding, because each of these substances have anticoagulant properties. Being a vegan should not affect surgery unless the patient has serious nutritional deficiencies. Drinking nutritional drinks and breast-feeding do not adversely affect the outcomes of surgery.

Which of the following nursing diagnoses would be most appropriate for a patient with a body mass index (BMI) of 18?

A patient with a body mass index (BMI) of 18 is considered underweight, therefore a diagnosis of Imbalanced Nutrition: Less than Body Requirements is appropriate. The patient is not at risk for imbalanced nutrition because it is already a problem and certainly is not experiencing nutrition that is more than body requirements. Readiness for Enhanced Nutrition is appropriate when there is a healthy pattern of nutrient intake that is sufficient for meeting metabolic needs and can be strengthened and enhanced.

A patient who is moved to a hospital bed following throat surgery is ordered to receive continuous tube feedings through a small-bore nasogastric tube. Following placement of the tube, which nursing action would the nurse initiate to ensure correct placement of the tube?

Although a radiographic examination exposes the patient to radiation and is costly, it is still the most accurate method to check correct tube placement. Other methods that can be used are aspiration of gastric contents and measurement of the pH of the aspirate. The recommended method for checking placement, other than a radiograph, is measuring the pH of the aspirate. Visual assessment of aspirated gastric contents is also suggested as a tool to check placement. In addition, the length of the exposed tube is measured after insertion and documented. Tube length should be checked and compared with this initial measurement, in conjunction with the previous two methods for checking tube placement. The auscultatory method is considered inaccurate and unreliable. Measurement of residual amount does not confirm placement.

A nurse is inserting a nasogastric tube ordered for a patient to monitor bleeding in his GI tract. When the tube is being passed through the pharynx, the patient begins to cough and show signs of respiratory distress. What would be the priority action of the nurse upon this assessment?

As the tube is passing through the pharynx and the patient begins to cough and show respiratory distress, the nurse should stop advancing the tube and pull it back into the nasal area. The nurse should also support the patient as he regains normal breathing ability and composure and have him try again if he feels able to.

A nurse is evaluating patients to determine their need for total parenteral nutrition (TPN). Which patients would be the best candidates for this type of nutritional support? Select all that apply.

Assessment criteria used to determine the need for TPN include an inability to achieve or maintain enteral access; motility disorders; intractable diarrhea; impaired absorption of nutrients from the GI tract (patient with celiac disease) and when oral intake has been or is expected to be inadequate over a 7- to 14-day period (Worthington & Gilbert, 2012; A.S.P.E.N., 2002). TPN promotes tissue healing and is a good choice for a patient with burns who has an inadequate diet. Oral intake is the best method of feeding; the second best method is via the enteral route. For short-term use (less than 4 weeks), a nasogastric or nasointestinal route is usually selected. A gastrostomy (enteral feeding) is the preferred route to deliver enteral nutrition in the patient who is comatose because the gastroesophageal sphincter remains intact, making regurgitation and aspiration less likely than with NG tube feedings. Patients who refuse to take food should not be force fed nutrients against their will.

A 56-year-old male patient who has COPD is refusing to eat. Which intervention would be most helpful in stimulating his appetite?

Food from home that the patient enjoys may stimulate him to eat. Pain medication should be given before meals, respiratory therapy should be scheduled after meals, and telling the patient what he must eat is no guarantee that he will comply.

A nurse is administering a tube feeding for a patient who is post bowel surgery. When attempting to aspirate the contents, the nurse notes that the tube is clogged. What would be the nurse's next action following this assessment?

In order to remove a clog in a feeding tube, the nurse should try using warm water and gentle pressure to unclog it. A stylet should never be used to unclog a tube, and cola and meat tenderizers have not been shown effective in removing clogs. The nurse should first attempt to remove the clog, and if unsuccessful, the tube should be replaced.

A nurse is feeding a patient who states that she is feeling nauseated and can't eat what is being offered. What would be the most appropriate initial action of the nurse in this situation?

The first action of the nurse when a patient has nausea is to remove the tray from the room. The nurse may then offer small amounts of foods and liquids such as crackers or ginger ale. The nurse may also administer a prescribed antiemetic and try small amounts of food when it takes effect.

A 62-year-old male patient has been admitted to the alcoholic referral unit in the local hospital. Based on an understanding of the effects of alcohol on the GI tract, which is a priority concern related to nutrition?

The need for B vitamins is increased in alcoholics because these nutrients are used to metabolize alcohol, thus depleting their supply. Alcohol abuse specifically affects the B vitamins. Obesity, dehydration, and vitamin C deficiency may be present, but these are not directly related to the effect of alcohol on the GI tract.

A nurse is feeding an elderly patient who has dementia. Which intervention should the nurse perform to facilitate this process?

To feed a patient with dementia, the nurse should stroke the underside of the patient's chin to promote swallowing, serve meals in the same place and at the same time, provide one food item at a time since a whole tray may be overwhelming, and provide between-meal snacks that are easy to consume using the hands.

A nurse is assessing a patient who has been NPO (nothing by mouth) prior to abdominal surgery. The patient is ordered a clear liquid diet for breakfast, to advance to a house diet as tolerated. Which assessments would indicate to the nurse that the patient's diet should not be advanced?

Tolerance of diet can be assessed by the following: absence of nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea; absence of feelings of fullness; absence of abdominal pain and distention; feelings of hunger; and the ability to consume at least 50% to 75% of the food on the meal tray.

A nurse is feeding a patient who is experiencing dysphagia. Which nursing intervention would the nurse initiate for this patient?

When feeding a patient who has dysphagia, the nurse should provide a 30-minute rest period prior to mealtime to promote swallowing; alternate solids and liquids when feeding the patient; sit the patient upright or, if on bedrest, elevate the head of the bed at a 90-degree angle; and initiate a nutrition consult for diet modification and food size and/or consistency.

A nurse is preparing medications for patients in the ICU. The nurse is aware that there are patient variables that may affect the absorption of these medications. Which statements accurately describe these variables? Select all that apply.

a, b, d, f. Nurses need to know about medications that may produce varied responses in patients from different ethnic groups. The patient's expectations of the medication may affect the response to the medication, for example, when a placebo is given and a patient has a therapeutic effect. The patient's environment may also influence the patient's response to medications, for example, sensory deprivation and overload may affect drug responses. Circadian rhythms and cycles may also influence drug action. The liver is the primary organ for drug breakdown, thus pathologic conditions that involve the liver may slow metabolism and alter the dosage of the drug needed to reach a therapeutic level. The presence of food in the stomach can delay the absorption of orally administered medications. Alternately, some medications should be given with food to prevent gastric irritation, and the nurse should consider this when establishing a patient's medication schedule. Other medications may have enhanced absorption if taken with certain foods.

A nurse working in a hospital includes abdominal assessment as part of patient assessment. In which patients would a nurse expect to find decreased or absent bowel sounds after listening for 5 minutes? Select all that apply.

a, b, f. Decreased or absent bowel sounds—evidenced only after listening for 5 minutes (Jensen, 2011)—signify the absence of bowel motility, commonly associated with peritonitis, paralytic ileus, and/or prolonged immobility. Hyperactive bowel sounds indicate increased bowel motility, commonly caused by diarrhea, gastroenteritis, or early bowel obstruction.

The three types of responses to pain are physiologic, behavioral, and affective. Which are examples of behavioral responses to pain? Select all that apply.

a, b, f. Protecting or guarding a painful area, moaning and crying, and moving away from painful stimuli are behavioral responses. Examples of a physiologic or involuntary response would be increased blood pressure or dilation of the pupils. Affective responses, such as anger, withdrawal, and depression, are psychological in nature.

A nurse is caring for a patient who has a nasogastric tube in place for gastric decompression. Which nursing actions are appropriate when irrigating a nasogastric tube connected to suction? Select all that apply.

a, c, e, f. The nurse irrigating a nasogastric tube connected to suction should draw up 30 mL of saline solution (or amount indicated in the order or policy) into the syringe, clamp the suction tubing near the connection site to protect the patient from leakage of NG drainage, place the tip of the syringe in the tube to gently insert the saline solution, then place the syringe in the drainage port, not in the blue air vent of a Salem sump or double-lumen tube (the blue air vent acts to decrease pressure built up in the stomach when the Salem sump is attached to suction). After instilling irrigant, hold the end of the NG tube over an irrigation tray or emesis basin, and observe for return flow of NG drainage into an available container.

A nurse is teaching an adolescent patient how to use a meter-dosed inhaler to control his asthma. What are appropriate guidelines for this procedure? Select all that apply.

a, c, e. The correct procedure for using a meter-dosed inhaler is: remove the mouthpiece cover and shake the inhaler well; breathe normally through the spacer; depress the canister releasing one puff into the spacer and inhale slowly and deeply; after inhaling, hold breath for 5 to 10 seconds, or as long as possible, and then exhale slowly through pursed lips; wait 1 to 5 minutes as prescribed before administering the next puff; and gargle and rinse with tap water after using the MDI.

A nurse caring for patients in an extended-care facility performs regular assessments of the patients' urinary functioning. Which patients would the nurse screen for urinary retention? Select all that apply.

a, c, e. Urinary retention occurs when urine is produced normally but is not excreted completely from the bladder. Factors associated with urinary retention include medications such as antihistamines, an enlarged prostate, or vaginal prolapse. Being on bedrest, having dementia, and having difficulty walking to the bathroom may place patients at risk for urinary incontinence.

A nurse is caring for a 56-year-old male patient diagnosed with bladder cancer who has a urinary diversion. Which actions would the nurse take when caring for this patient? Select all that apply

a, c, f. When caring for a patient with a urinary diversion, the nurse should measure the patient's fluid intake and output to monitor fluid balance, change the appliance frequently, monitor the return of intestinal function and peristalsis, keep the skin around the stoma dry, watch for mucous in the urine as a normal finding, and encourage the patient to participate in care and look at the stoma.

One of the most common distinctions of pain is whether it is acute or chronic. Which examples describe chronic pain? Select all that apply.

a, d, e. Chronic pain is pain that may be limited, intermittent, or persistent but that lasts beyond the normal healing period. Examples are cancer pain, fibromyalgia pain, and back pain. Acute pain is generally rapid in onset and varies in intensity from mild to severe, as occurs with an emergency appendectomy, a ruptured aneurysm, and pain from burns.

A nurse who is administering medications to patients in an acute care setting studies the pharmacokinetics of the drugs being administered. Which statements accurately describe these mechanisms of action? Select all that apply.

a, d, f. Distribution occurs after a drug has been absorbed into the bloodstream and the drug is distributed throughout the body, becoming available to body fluids and body tissues. Some drugs move from the intestinal lumen to the liver by way of the portal vein and do not go directly into the systemic circulation following oral absorption. This is called the first-pass effect, or hepatic first pass. Excretion is the process of removing a drug or its metabolites (products of metabolism) from the body. Absorption is the process by which a drug is transferred from its site of entry into the body to the bloodstream. Metabolism, or biotransformation, is the change of a drug from its original form to a new form. The liver is the primary site for drug metabolism. The gastrointestinal tract, as well as sweat, salivary, and mammary glands, are routes of drug excretion.

The nurse uses blended competencies when caring for patients in a rehabilitation facility. Which examples of interventions involve cognitive skills? Select all that apply.

a, d. Using critical thinking and learning medication dosages are cognitive competencies. Performing procedures correctly is a technical skill, helping a patient with an informed consent form is a legal/ethical issue, and comforting a patient is an interpersonal skill.

A nurse is caring for a postpartum patient who has stitches in the perineum from an episotomy (surgically planned incision to prevent vaginal tears). Which medication would the nurse most likely administer to this patient?

a. Although all the choices are laxatives that would soften the stool and make it easier to expel, a stool softener, such as Colace, is the one recommended for a patient who must avoid straining. In this case, it would help to prevent disturbing the stitches in the perineum.

A nurse is assessing a 15-year-old female patient who is diagnosed with anorexia. Following the assessment, the nurse recommends that the patient meet with a nutritionist. This action best exemplifies the use of:

a. Although all the options refer to the skills used by nurses in practice, the best choice is clinical judgment as it refers to the result or outcome of critical thinking or clinical reasoning—in this case the recommendation to meet with a nutritionist. Clinical reasoning usually refers to ways of thinking about patient care issues (determining, preventing, and managing patient problems). Critical thinking is a broad term that includes reasoning both outside and inside of the clinical setting. Blended competencies are the cognitive, technical, interpersonal, and ethical/legal skills combined with the willingness to use them creatively and critically when working with patients.

A nurse caring for patients with bowel alterations formulates a nursing diagnosis for a patient with a new ileostomy. Which diagnosis is most appropriate?

a. An ileostomy may cause disturbed body image due to the invasive nature of the procedure and the presence of the stoma. Constipation does not normally occur with an ileostomy because the drainage is liquid. Growth and development are not generally affected by the formation of an ileostomy. Excess fluid volume is unlikely to occur because the drainage is liquid and probably continual.

The physician has ordered an indwelling catheter inserted in a hospitalized male patient. What consideration would the nurse keep in mind when performing this procedure?

a. Because of its length, the male urethra is more prone to injury and requires that the catheter be inserted 6″ to 8″. This procedure requires surgical asepsis to prevent introducing bacteria into the urinary tract. The presence of an indwelling catheter places the patient at risk for a UTI.

An experienced nurse tells a beginning nurse not to bother studying too hard, since most clinical reasoning becomes "second nature" and "intuitive" once you start practicing. What thinking below should underlie the beginning nurse's response?

a. Beginning nurses must use nursing knowledge and scientific problem solving as the basis of care they give; intuitive problem solving comes with years of practice and observation. If the beginning nurse has an intuition about a patient, that information should be discussed with the faculty member, preceptor, or supervisor. Answer b is incorrect because there is a place for intuitive reasoning in nursing, but it will never replace logical, scientific reasoning. Critical thinking is contextual and changes depending on the circumstances, not on personal preference.

A patient's spinal cord was severed, and he is paralyzed from the waist down. When obtaining data about this patient, which component of the sensory experience would be most important for the nurse to assess?

a. Below-the-waist paralysis makes the transmission of tactile stimuli a problem. Although the other options may be assessed, they are indirectly related to his paralysis and of lesser importance at this time.

A patient who has pneumonia has had a fever for 3 days. What characteristics would the nurse anticipate related to the patient's urine output?

a. Fever and diaphoresis cause the kidneys to conserve body fluids. Thus, the urine is concentrated and decreased in amount.

A nurse is administering an oral medication to a patient via a gastric tube. The nurse observes the medication enter the tube, and then the tube becomes clogged. What would be the appropriate initial action of the nurse in this situation?

a. If medication becomes clogged in a gastric tube, the nurse should attach a 10-mL syringe on the end of the tube and pull back and lightly apply pressure to the plunger in a repetitive motion to attempt to dislodge the medication. If the medication does not move through the tube, the nurse should notify the primary care provider, who may request the tube be replaced.

Mr. Wright is recovering from abdominal surgery. When the nurse assists him to walk, she observes that he grimaces, moves stiffly, and becomes pale. She is aware that he has consistently refused his pain medication. What would be a priority nursing diagnosis for this patient?

a. Mr. Wright's immediate problem is his pain that is unrelieved because he refuses to take his pain medication for an unknown reason. The other nursing diagnoses are plausible, but not a priority in this situation.

A nurse is preparing a hospitalized patient for a colonoscopy. Which nursing action is the recommended preparation for this test?

a. Preparation for a colonoscopy includes a clear liquid diet 24 to 48 hours before the test along with a 2-day bowel prep of a strong cathartic and Dulcolax on day 1 and enema on day 2 of the test, or a 1-day bowel prep that consists of ingestion of a gallon of bowel cleanser in a short period of time. Conscious sedation, not general anesthesia, will be given for the colonoscopy. A chalky-tasting barium contrast mixture is given to drink before an upper gastrointestinal and small-bowel series of tests.

A nurse is caring for a patient who is taking phenazopyridine (Pyridium, a urinary tract analgesic). The patient questions the nurse: "My urine was bright orangish-red today; is there something wrong with me?" What would be the nurse's best response?

a. Pyridium is noted for turning the urine orange-red; the patient needs to be aware of this.

An elderly patient is confined to bedrest following cervical spine surgery to treat nerve pinching. The nurse is vigilant about turning the patient and assessing the patient regularly to prevent the formation of pressure ulcers. What type of agent is the stimulus for pressure ulcers?

a. Receptors in the skin and superficial organs may be stimulated by mechanical, thermal, chemical, and electrical agents. Friction from bed linens causing pressure sores and pressure from a cast are mechanical stimulants. Sunburn is a thermal stimulant. An acid burn is the result of a chemical stimulant. The jolt from a lightening bolt is an electrical stimulant.

In a group home in which most patients have slight to moderate visual or hearing impairment and some are periodically confused, what would be a nurse's first priority in caring for sensory concerns?

a. Safety is a basic physiologic need that must be met before higher-level needs—such as love and belonging, self-esteem, and self-actualization—can be met.

The nurse is assessing the pain of a neonate who is admitted to the NICU with a heart defect. Which pain assessment scale would be the best tool to use with this patient?

a. The CRIES Pain Scale is a tool intended for use with neonates and infants from 0 to 6 months. The COMFORT Scale, used to assess pain and distress in critically ill pediatric patients, relies on six behavioral and two physiologic factors that determine the level of analgesia needed to adequately relieve pain in these children. The FLACC scale (F—Faces, L—Legs, A—Activity, C—Cry, C—Consolability) was designed for infants and children from age 2 months to 7 years who are unable to validate the presence or severity of pain. The FACES scale is used for children who can compare their pain to the faces depicted on the scale.

A nurse is caring for a male patient who had a condom catheter applied following hip surgery. What action would be a priority when caring for this patient?

a. The catheter should be allowed to drain freely through tubing that is not kinked. It also should be removed daily to prevent skin excoriation and should not be fastened too tightly or restriction of blood vessels in the area is likely. Confining a patient to bedrest increases the risk for other hazards related to immobility.

A nurse is administering a pain medication to a patient. In addition to checking his identification bracelet, the nurse correctly verifies his identity by:

a. The nurse should ask the patient to state his name. A sign over the patient's bed may not always be current. The roommate is an unsafe source of information. The patient may not hear his name but may reply in the affirmative anyway (e.g., a person with a hearing deficit).

Which patient would a nurse assess as being at greatest risk for sensory deprivation?

a. The patient confined to bedrest at home is at risk for greatly reduced environmental stimuli. All of the other patients are in environments in which environmental stimuli are at least adequate.

A nurse is assessing the abdomen of a patient who is experiencing frequent bouts of diarrhea. The nurse first observes the contour of the abdomen, noting any masses, scars, or areas of distention. What action would the nurse perform next?

a. The sequence for abdominal assessment proceeds from inspection, auscultation, percussion, and then palpation. Inspection and auscultation are performed before palpation because palpation may disturb normal peristalsis and bowel motility. Percussion and deep palpation are usually performed by advanced practice professionals.

A nurse is using the SOAP format of documentation to document care of a patient who is diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Which source of information would be the nurse's focus when completing this documentation?

a. When using the SOAP format, the problem list at the front of the chart alerts all caregivers to patient priorities. Narrative notes allow nurses to describe a condition, situation, or response in their own terms. Abnormal status can be seen immediately when using charting by exception, and planned interventions and patient expected outcomes are the focus of the case management model.

According to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, if a health institution wants to release a patient's health information (PHI) for purposes other than treatment, payment, and routine health care operations, the patient must be asked to sign an authorization. The nurse is aware that there are exceptions to this requirement. In which of the following cases is an authorization form not needed? Select all that apply.

b, c, d, e. Authorization is not required for tracking disease outbreaks, providing PHI to a coroner, reporting incidents of child abuse, or facilitating organ donations. Under no circumstance can a nurse provide information to a news reporter without the patient's express authorization. An authorization form is still needed to provide PHI for a patient who has Alzheimer's disease.

A nurse uses critical thinking skills to focus on the care plan of an elderly patient who has dementia and needs placement in a long-term care facility. Which statements describe characteristics of this type of critical thinking applied to clinical reasoning? Select all that apply.

b, c, e. Critical thinking applied to clinical reasoning and judgment in nursing practice is guided by standards, policies and procedures, and ethics codes. It is based on principles of nursing process, problem solving, and the scientific method. It carefully identifies the key problems, issues, and risks involved, and is driven by patient, family, and community needs, as well as nurses' needs to give competent, efficient care. It also calls for strategies that make the most of human potential and compensate for problems created by human nature. It is constantly re-evaluating, self-correcting, and striving to improve

A nurse instructor is teaching a class of student nurses about the nature of pain. Which statements accurately describe this phenomenon? Select all that apply.

b, c, f. Margo McCaffery (1979, p. 11) offers the classic definition of pain that is probably of greatest benefit to nurses and their patients: "Pain is whatever the experiencing person says it is, existing whenever he (or she) says it does." The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) further defines pain as an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage (IASP, 1994). Pain is an elusive and complex phenomenon, and despite its universality, its exact nature remains a mystery. Pain is present whenever a person says it is, even when no specific cause of the pain can be found. Pain may be classified according to its duration, its location or source, its mode of transmission, or its etiology.

A nurse who is assessing an older female patient in a long-term care facility notes that the patient is at risk for sensory deprivation related to severe rheumatoid arthritis limiting her activity. Which interventions would the nurse recommend based on this finding? Select all that apply.

b, d, e. For a patient who has sensory deprivation, the nurse should provide interaction with children and pets, ensure that the patient shares meals with other patients, and discourage the use of sedatives. Using a lower tone of voice is appropriate for a patient who has a hearing deficit, decreasing environmental noise is an intervention for sensory overload, and providing adequate lighting and removing clutter is an intervention for a vision deficit.

A nurse assesses the stool of patients who are experiencing gastrointestinal problems. In which patients would diarrhea be a possible finding? Select all that apply.

b, e, f. Diarrhea is a potential adverse effect of treatment with amoxicillin clavulanate (Augmentin), laxatives, or over-the-counter antacids. Narcotics, diuretics, and dehydration may lead to constipation.

The nursing process ensures that nurses are person centered rather than task centered. Rather than simply approaching a patient to take vital signs, the nurse thinks, "How is Mrs. Barclay today? Are our nursing actions helping her to achieve her goals? How can we better help her?" This demonstrates which characteristic of the nursing process?

b, interpersonal. All of the other options are characteristics of the nursing process, but the conversation and thinking quoted best illustrates the interpersonal dimension of the nursing process.

A nurse is diagnosing an 11-year-old 6th grade student following a physical assessment. The nurse notes that the student's grades have dropped, she has difficulty completing her work on time, and she frequently rubs her eyes and squints. Her visual acuity on a Snellen's eye chart is 160/20. Which nursing diagnosis would be most appropriate?

b. An important role for an 11-year-old is that of student. Her impaired vision is clearly disturbing her role performance as a student, as evidenced by her lower grades. Although the other options may also represent accurate diagnoses for this patient, they do not flow from the data presented.

A nurse observes that a patient who has cataracts is sitting closer to the television than usual. The nurse would interpret that the etiologic basis of this sensory problem is an alteration in:

b. Cataracts are interfering with the patient's ability to receive visual stimuli: altered sensory reception. The nature of incoming stimuli, the conduction of nerve impulses, and the translation of incoming impulses in the brain are not a problem here.

When assessing pain in a child, the nurse needs to be aware of what considerations?

b. Health care personnel are only now becoming aware of pain relief as a priority for children in pain. The evidence supports the fact that children do indeed feel pain and reliable assessment tools are available specifically for use with children. Opioid analgesics may be safely used with children as long as they are carefully monitored.

A nurse is irrigating the colostomy of a patient and is unable to get the irrigation solution to flow. What would be the nurse's next action in this situation?

b. If irrigation solution is not flowing, the nurse should first check the clamp on the tubing to make sure the tubing is open. Next, the nurse should gently manipulate the cone in the stoma and check for a blockage of stool. If there is a blockage, the nurse should remove the cone from the stoma, clean the area, and gently reinsert. Alternately, the nurse could assist the patient to a side-lying or sitting position in bed, place a waterproof pad under the irrigation sleeve, and place the drainage end of the sleeve in a bedpan.

After surgery, a patient is having difficulty voiding. Which nursing action would most likely lead to an increased difficulty with voiding?

b. Ignoring the urge to void makes urination even more difficult and should be avoided. The other activities are all recommended nursing activities to promote voiding.

A nurse forms the following nursing diagnosis for a patient: Impaired Urinary Elimination related to maturational enuresis. Based on this diagnosis, for which patient is the nurse caring?

b. Maturational enuresis is involuntary urination after an age when continence should be present. A 12-month-old child is not expected to be continent, and incontinence and neurologic damage are not maturational problems.

Applying the gate control theory of pain, what would be an effective nursing intervention for a patient with lower back pain?

b. Nursing measures such as applying warmth to the lower back stimulate the large nerve fibers to close the gate and block the pain. The other choices do not involve attempts to stimulate large nerve fibers that interfere with pain transmission as explained by the gate control theory.

Which action would be most important for a nurse to include in the plan of care for a patient who is 85 years old and has presbycusis?

b. Presbycusis is a normal loss of hearing as a result of the aging process. Speaking distinctly in lower frequencies is indicated. The other choices refer to interventions for other sensory problems.

A patient requires 40 units of NPH insulin and 10 units of regular insulin daily subcutaneously. What is the correct sequence when mixing insulins?

b. Regular or short-acting insulin should never be contaminated with NPH or any insulin modified with added protein. Placing air in the NPH vial first without allowing the needle to contact the solution ensures that the regular insulin will not be contaminated.

When assessing a patient receiving a continuous opioid infusion, the nurse immediately notifies the physician when the patient has:

b. Sedation level is more indicative of respiratory depression because a drop in level usually precedes it. A sedation level of 4 calls for immediate action because the patient has minimal or no response to stimuli. A respiratory level of 10 with normal depth of breathing is usually not a cause for alarm. Mild confusion may be evident with the initial dose and then disappear; additional observation is necessary. Constipation should be reported to the physician, but is not the priority in this situation.

Ms. Hall has an order for hydromorphone (Dilaudid), 2 mg, intravenously, q 4 hours PRN pain. The nurse notes that according to Ms. Hall's chart, she is allergic to Dilaudid. The order for medication was signed by Dr. Long. What would be the correct procedure for the nurse to follow in this situation?

b. The nurse is responsible for any medications he or she gives and must contact the doctor to inform her of the patient's allergy to the drug. The nurse should not give the medication and might speak with the supervisor only if uncomfortable with the physician's answer once she is notified. The nurse is legally unable to order a replacement medication, as is the pharmacist.

A friend of a nurse calls and asks if she is still working at Memorial Hospital. The nurse replies, "Yes." The friend tells the nurse that his girlfriend's father was just admitted as a patient and he wants the nurse to find out how he is. The friend states, "Sue seems unusually worried about her dad, but she won't talk to me and I want to be able to help her." What is the best initial response the nurse should make?

b. The nurse should immediately clarify what he or she can and cannot do. Since the primary reason for refusing to help is linked to the responsibility to protect patient privacy and confidentiality, the nurse should not begin by mentioning the real penalties linked to abuses of privacy. Finally, it is appropriate to ask about Sue and her worries, but this should be done after the nurse clarifies what he or she is able to do.

A nurse is documenting the care given to a 56-year-old patient diagnosed with an osteosarcoma, whose right leg was amputated. The nurse accidentally documents that a dressing changed was performed on the left leg. What would be the best action of the nurse to correct this documentation?

b. The nurse should not use dittos, erasures, or correcting fluids. A single line should be drawn through an incorrect entry, and the words "mistaken entry" or "error in charting" should be printed above or beside the entry and signed. The entry should then be rewritten correctly.

A nurse caring for a patient's hemodialysis access documents the following: "5/10/15 0930 Arteriovenous fistula patent in right upper arm. Area is warm to touch and edematous. Patient denies pain and tenderness. Positive bruit and thrill noted." Which documented finding would the nurse report to the primary care provider?

b. The nurse would report a site that is warm and edematous as this could be a sign of a site infection. The thrill and bruit are normal findings caused by arterial blood flowing into the vein. If these are not present, the access may be cutting off. No report of pain is a normal finding.

A patient complains of abdominal pain that is difficult to localize. The nurse documents this as which type of pain?

b. The patient's pain would be categorized as visceral pain, which is poorly localized and can originate in body organs in the abdomen. Cutaneous pain (superficial pain) usually involves the skin or subcutaneous tissue. A paper cut that produces sharp pain with a burning sensation is an example of cutaneous pain. Deep somatic pain is diffuse or scattered and originates in tendons, ligaments, bones, blood vessels, and nerves. Strong pressure on a bone or damage to tissue that occurs with a sprain causes deep somatic pain.

A physician orders a pain medication for a postoperative patient that is a PRN order. When would the nurse administer this medication?

b. When the prescriber writes a PRN order ("as needed") for medication, the patient receives medication when it is requested or required. With a single or one-time order, the directive is carried out only once, at a time specified by the prescriber. A stat order is a single order carried out immediately. A standing order (or routine order) is carried out as specified until it is canceled by another order.

A nurse formulates the following diagnosis for an older female patient in a long-term care facility: Disturbed Sensory Perception: Chronic Sensory Deprivation related to the effects of aging. The patient walked out the door unobserved and was lost for several hours. Which interventions would be most effective for this patient? Select all that apply.

c, d, f. Even if well motivated, ignoring a patient's confusion to prevent embarrassment may be dangerous, as it was in this case in which the appropriate safety precautions were never implemented. Reducing the type of stimuli in the room and decreasing environmental noise is appropriate for a patient who is experiencing sensory overload. The other options are related to sensory deprivation and are appropriate for this patient.

A nurse is documenting patient data in the medical record of a patient admitted to the hospital with a diagnosis of appendicitis. The physician has ordered 10 mg morphine IV every 3 to 4 hours. Which examples of documentation of care for this patient follows recommended guidelines? Select all that apply.

c, d, f. The nurse should enter information in a complete, accurate, concise, current, and factual manner and indicate in each entry the date and both the time the entry was written and the time of pertinent observations and interventions. When charting, the nurse should avoid the use of stereotypes or derogatory terms as well as generalizations such as "seems comfortable today." The nurse should never document an intervention before carrying it out.

The nurse is administering a medication to a patient via a nasogastric tube. Which are accurate guidelines related to this procedure? Select all that apply.

c, d, f. The nurse should use the recommended procedure for checking tube placement prior to administering medications. The nurse should also give each medication separately and flush with water between each drug and adjust the amount of water used if fluids are restricted. Enteric-coated medications should not be crushed, the tube should be flushed with 15 to 30 mL of water, and the head of the bed should be elevated to prevent reflux.

A nurse is preparing a brochure to teach patients how to prevent urinary tract infections. Which teaching points would the nurse include? Select all that apply.

c, e, f. It is recommended that a healthy adult drink eight to ten 8-oz glasses of fluid daily, limit caffeine because it is irritating to the bladder mucosa, and drink 10 oz of cranberry or blueberry juice daily to help prevent bacteriuria. It is also recommended to wear underwear with a cotton crotch, take showers rather than baths, and drink two glasses of water before and after sexual intercourse and void immediately after intercourse.

A nurse is assessing a 78-year-old male patient for kinesthetic and visceral disturbances. Which techniques would the nurse use for this assessment? Select all that apply.

c, e, f. To assess for kinesthetic and visceral disturbances, the nurse would assess for perceived body changes inside and out, and changes in body parts or position. Asking if the patient is bored assesses stimulation, asking if anything interferes with his senses assesses reception, and asking about difficulty communicating assesses for transmission-perception-reaction.

The nurse practices using critical thinking indicators (CTIs) when caring for patients in the hospital setting. The best description of CTIs is:

c, evidence-based descriptions of behaviors that demonstrate the knowledge, characteristics, and skills that promote critical thinking in clinical practice.

A nurse is caring for a male patient with a severe hearing deficit who is able to read lips and use sign language. Which nursing intervention would be best to prevent sensory alterations for this patient?

c. Although all the options listed are appropriate, providing daily opportunities for this patient to participate in a social hour builds on his strength of being able to lip-read and provides sufficient sensory stimulation to prevent sensory deprivation resulting from his hearing loss, thereby meeting his needs.

A nurse formulated the following nursing diagnosis for an 8-month-old infant: Disturbed Sensory Perception: Sensory Deprivation related to inadequate parenting. Since that diagnosis was made, both parents have attended parenting classes. However, both parents work while the infant stays with her 86-year-old grandmother, who has reduced vision. The parents provide appropriate stimulation in the evening. At an evaluation conference at the age of 11 months, the infant lies on the floor sucking her thumb and rocking her body. Her facial expression is dull, and she vocalizes only in a low monotone ("uh-h-h"). Which statement accurately reflects evaluation about the child's sensory deprivation?

c. Although the data show that the parents have been motivated to improve their parenting skills, it is clear from the data that the infant's sensory deprivation is still severe. The data suggest that the grandmother is not improving the infant's care, but there is nothing to suggest that she is unable to do so if shown how.

A nurse uses a whirlpool to relax a patient following intense physical therapy to restore movement in her legs. What is a potent pain-blocking neuromodulator, released through relaxation techniques?

c. Endorphins are produced at neural synapses at various points along the CNS pathway. They are powerful pain-blocking chemicals that have prolonged analgesic effects and produce euphoria. It is thought that endorphins are released through pain relief measures, such as relaxation techniques. Prostaglandins, substance P, and serotonin (a hormone that can act to stimulate smooth muscles, inhibit gastric secretion, and produce vasoconstriction) are neurotransmitters or substances that either excite or inhibit target nerve cells.

A nurse administers a dose of an oral medication for hypertension to a patient who immediately vomits after swallowing the pill. What would be the appropriate initial action of the nurse in this situation?

c. If a patient vomits immediately after swallowing an oral pill, the nurse should assess the vomit for the pill or fragments of it. The nurse should then notify the primary care provider to see if another dosage should be administered.

A nurse is performing intermittent closed-catheter irrigation for a patient with an indwelling catheter. After attaching the syringe to the access port on the catheter, the nurse finds that the irrigant will not enter the catheter. What intervention would the nurse appropriately perform next?

c. If the irrigation solution will not enter the catheter, the nurse should not force the solution into the catheter; instead, the nurse should notify the primary care provider and prepare to change the catheter.

A nurse is administering a large-volume cleansing enema to a patient prior to surgery. Once the enema solution is introduced, the patient complains of severe cramping. What would be the appropriate nursing intervention in this situation?

c. If the patient complains of severe cramping with introduction of an enema solution, the nurse should lower the solution container and check the temperature and flow rate. If the solution is too cold or the flow rate too fast, severe cramping may occur.

A nurse is assisting a patient to empty and change an ostomy appliance. When the procedure is finished, the nurse notes that the stoma is protruding into the bag. What would be the nurse's first action in this situation?

c. If the stoma is protruding into the bag after changing the appliance on an ostomy, the nurse should have the patient rest for 30 minutes. If the stoma is not back to normal size within that time, notify the physician. If the stoma stays prolapsed, it may twist, resulting in impaired circulation to the stoma.

A resident who is called to see a patient in the middle of the night is leaving the unit but then remembers that he forgot to write a new order for a pain medication a nurse had requested for another patient. Tired and already being paged to another unit, he verbally tells the nurse the order and asks the nurse to document it on the physician's order sheet. The nurse's best response is:

c. In most agencies, the only circumstance in which an attending physician, nurse practitioner, or house officer may issue orders verbally is in a medical emergency, when the physician/nurse practitioner is present but finds it impossible, due to the emergency situation, to write the order.

A nurse is caring for an alert, ambulatory, older resident in a long-term care facility who voids frequently and has difficulty making it to the bathroom in time. Which nursing intervention would be most helpful for this patient?

c. Kegel exercises may help a patient regain control of the micturition process. Incontinence is not a normal consequence of aging. Using absorbent products may remove motivation from the patient and caregiver to seek evaluation and treatment of the incontinence; they should be used only after careful evaluation by a health care provider. An indwelling catheter is the last choice of treatment.

A nurse is caring for a patient who has complications related to type 2 diabetes mellitus. The nurse researches new procedures to care for foot ulcers when developing a plan of care for this patient. Which QSEN competency does this action represent?

c. Quality improvement involves routinely updating nursing policies and procedures. Providing patient-centered care involves listening to the patient and demonstrating respect and compassion. Evidence-based practice is used when adhering to internal policies and standardized skills. The nurse is employing informatics by using information and technology to communicate, manage knowledge, and support decision making.

A medication order reads: "K-Dur, 20 mEq po b.i.d." When and how does the nurse correctly give this drug?

c. The abbreviation "b.i.d." refers to twice-a-day administration. po (by mouth) refers to administration by the oral route.

A female patient who is receiving chemotherapy for breast cancer tells the nurse, "The treatment for this cancer is worse than the disease itself. I'm not going to come for my therapy anymore." The nurse responds by using critical thinking skills to address this patient problem. Which action is the first step the nurse would take in this process?

c. The first step when thinking critically about a situation is to identify the purpose or goal of your thinking. Reassessing the patient helps to discipline thinking by directing all thoughts toward the goal. Once the problem is addressed, it is important for the nurse to judge the adequacy of the knowledge, identify potential problems, use helpful resources, and critique the decision.

A nurse asks a patient to close her eyes, state when she feels something, and describe the feeling. The nurse then brushes the patient's skin with a cotton ball, and touches the patient's skin with both sides of a safety pin. Which sense is the nurse assessing?

c. The nurse is assessing for tactile (touch) disturbances by brushing the skin with a cotton ball and touching the skin with a safety pin. Gustatory disturbances involve taste, olfactory disturbances involve the sense of smell, and kinesthetic disturbances are related to body positioning.

A nurse discovers that she made a medication error. What should be the nurse's first response?

c. The nurse's first responsibility is the patient—careful observation is necessary to assess for any effect of the medication error. The other nursing actions are pertinent, but only after checking the patient's welfare.

A patient has a fecal impaction. The nurse correctly administers an oil-retention enema by:

c. The patient should be instructed to retain the enema solution for at least 30 minutes or as indicated in the manufacturer's instructions. The usual amount of solution administered with a retention enema is 150 to 200 mL for an adult. The milk and molasses mixture is a carminative enema that helps to expel flatus. The patient should be instructed to lie on the left side of the bed as dictated by patient condition and comfort.

A nurse is performing digital removal of stool on a 74-year old female patient with a fecal impaction. During the procedure the patient tells the nurse she is feeling dizzy and nauseated, and then she vomits. What should be the nurse's next action?

c. When a patient complains of dizziness or lightheadedness and has nausea and vomiting during digital stool removal, the nurse should stop the procedure, assess heart rate and blood pressure, and notify the physician. The vagal nerve may have been stimulated.

A nurse is administering heparin subcutaneously to a patient. What is the correct technique for this procedure?

c. When giving heparin subcutaneously, the nurse should not aspirate or massage, so as not to cause trauma or bleeding in the tissues.

A nurse is reconstituting powdered medication in a vial. Which action is a recommended step in this process?

c. When reconstituting powdered medication in a vial, the nurse should draw up the appropriate amount of diluent into the syringe, insert the needle through the center of the self-sealing stopper on the powdered medication vial, inject the diluent into the powdered medication vial, remove the needle from the vial and replace the cap, and gently agitate the vial to mix the powdered medication and diluent completely. The nurse should then draw up the prescribed amount of medication while holding the syringe vertically and at eye level.

A nurse is using the ISBARR physician reporting system to report the deteriorating mental status of Mr. Sanchez, a male patient who has been prescribed morphine via a patient-controlled analgesia pump (PCA) for pain related to pancreatic cancer. Place the following nursing statements related to this call in the order in which they should be performed.

d, a, e, b, f, c. The order for ISBARR is: identity/introduction, situation, background, assessment, recommendation, and read-back.

A nurse caring for patients in a long-term care facility is often required to collect urine specimens from patients for laboratory testing. Which techniques for urine collection are performed correctly? Select all that apply.

d, e, f. A urine culture requires about 3 mL of urine, whereas routine urinalysis requires at least 10 mL of urine. The preferred method of collecting a urine specimen from a urinary diversion is to catheterize the stoma. For a 24-hour urine specimen, the nurse should discard the first voiding, then collect all urine voided for the next 24 hours. A sterile urine specimen is not required for a routine urinalysis. Urine chemistry is altered after urine stands at room temperature for a long period of time. A specimen from the collecting receptacle (drainage bag) may not be fresh urine and could result in an inaccurate analysis.

A nurse prepares to assist a patient with her newly created ileostomy. Which recommended patient teaching points would the nurse stress? Select all that apply.

d, e, f. Ileostomies normally have liquid, foul-smelling stool. The nurse should encourage the intake of dark green vegetables because they contain chlorophyll, which helps to deodorize the feces. Patients with ileostomies need to be aware they may experience a tendency to develop food blockages, especially when high-fiber foods are consumed. The stoma should be dark pink to red and moist. Stoma size usually stabilizes within 4 to 6 weeks, and the skin around the stoma site (peristomal area) should be kept clean and dry.

A nurse is scheduling tests for a patient who has been experiencing epigastric pain. The physician ordered the following tests: (a) barium enema, (b) fecal occult blood test, (c) endoscopic studies, and (d) upper gastrointestinal series. Which is the correct order in which the tests would normally be performed?

d. A fecal occult blood test should be done first to detect gastrointestinal bleeding. Barium studies should be performed next to visualize gastrointestinal structures and reveal any inflammation, ulcers, tumors, strictures, or other lesions. A barium enema and routine radiography should precede an upper gastrointestinal series because retained barium from an upper gastrointestinal series could take several days to pass through the gastrointestinal tract and cloud anatomic detail on the barium enema studies. Noninvasive procedures usually take precedence over invasive procedures, such as endoscopic studies, when sufficient diagnostic data can be obtained from them.

A nurse is changing the stoma appliance on a patient's ileal conduit. Which characteristic of the stoma would alert the nurse that the patient is experiencing ischemia?

d. A purple-blue stoma may reflect compromised circulation or ischemia. A pale stoma may indicate anemia. The stoma may be swollen at first, but that condition should subside with time. A normal stoma should be moist and dark pink to red in color.

A nurse is discharging a patient from the hospital following a heart stent procedure. The patient asks to see and copy his medical record. What is the nurse's best response?

d. According to HIPAA, patients have a right to see and copy their health record; update their health record; get a list of the disclosures a health care institution has made independent of disclosures made for the purposes of treatment, payment, and health care operations; request a restriction on certain uses or disclosures; and choose how to receive health information. The nurse should be aware of agency policies regarding the patient's right to access and copy records.

A patient is in the late stages of AIDS, which is now affecting his brain as well other major organ systems. The patient confides to the nurse that he feels terribly alone because most of his friends are afraid to visit. The nurse determines that the least likely underlying etiology for his sensory problems would be:

d. Emotional responses are an effect of sensory deprivation, and although they may be occurring with this patient, they are not the underlying etiology for his condition. This patient is receiving decreased environmental stimuli (a) (e.g., from his friends), is more than likely experiencing problems with reception because of major organ involvement (b), and his impaired brain function will impair impulse transmission-perception- reaction (c).

A nurse is teaching a patient with frequent constipation how to implement a bowel-training program. What is a recommended teaching point?

d. For a bowel-training program to be effective, the patient must have ample time for evacuation (usually 20-30 minutes). Fluid intake is increased to 2,500 to 3,000 mL, food high in bulk is recommended as part of the program, and a daily enema is not administered in a bowel-training program. A cathartic suppository may be used 30 minutes before the patient's usual defecation time to stimulate peristalsis.

Data must be collected to evaluate the effectiveness of a plan to reduce urinary incontinence in an older adult patient. Which information is least important for the evaluation process?

d. Incontinence is not a natural consequence of the aging process. All the other factors are necessary information for the plan of care.

A medication order reads: "Hydromorphone, 2 mg IV every 3 to 4 hours PRN pain." The prefilled cartridge is available with a label reading "Hydromorphone 2 mg/1 mL." The cartridge contains 1.2 mL of hydromorphone. Which nursing action is correct?

d. Many cartridges are overfilled, and some of the medication needs to be discarded. Always check the volume needed to provide the correct dose with the volume in the syringe. Giving the excess medication in the cartridge may result in adverse effects for the patient. For this dose, it is not necessary to call the pharmacy or refuse to give the medication, provided the order is written correctly.

A patient is postoperative following an emergency cesarean section birth. The patient asks the nurse about the use of pain medications following surgery. What would be a correct response by the nurse?

d. Many pain medications are ordered on a PRN (as needed) basis. Therefore, nurses must be diligent to assess patients for pain and administer medications as needed. A patient should not be afraid to request these medications and should not wait until the pain is unbearable. Few people become addicted to the medications if used for a short period of time. Pain following surgery can be controlled and should not be considered a natural part of the experience that will lessen in time.

A patient has an order for an analgesic medication to be given PRN. When would the nurse administer this medication?

d. PRN means "as needed."

A female patient who is having a myocardial infarction complains of pain that is situated in her jaw. The nurse documents this as what type of pain?

d. Referred pain is perceived in an area distant from its point of origin, whereas transient pain is brief and passes quickly. Superficial pain originates in the skin or subcutaneous tissue. Phantom pain may occur in a person who has had a body part amputated, either surgically or traumatically.

A nurse working in a long-term care facility bases patient care on five caring processes: knowing, being with, doing for, enabling, and maintaining belief. This approach to patient care best describes the theory of which theorist?

d. Swanson (1991) identifies five caring processes and defines caring as "a nurturing way of relating to a valued other toward whom one feels a personal sense of commitment and responsibility. Travelbee (1971), an early nurse theorist, developed the Human-to-Human Relationship Model and defined nursing as an interpersonal process whereby the professional nurse practitioner assists an individual, family, or community to prevent or cope with the experience of illness and suffering, and if necessary to find meaning in these experiences. Benner and Wrubel (1989) write that caring is a basic way of being in the world and that caring is central to human expertise, curing, and healing. Watson's theory is based on the belief that all humans are to be valued, cared for, respected, nurtured, understood, and assisted.

A patient in an intensive care burn unit for 1 week is in pain much of the time and has his face and both arms heavily bandaged. His wife visits every evening for 15 minutes at 6, 7, and 8 PM. A heart monitor beeps for a patient on one side, and another patient moans frequently. Assessment would suggest that that the patient probably is experiencing:

d. This patient's bandages may result in deficient sensory stimulation (sensory deprivation), and the monitors and other sounds in the intensive care burn unit may cause a sensory overload. All other options are incomplete responses.

A pregnant woman is receiving an epidural analgesic prior to delivery. The nurse provides vigilant monitoring of this patient to prevent the occurrence of:

d. Too much of an opioid drug given by way of an epidural catheter or a displaced catheter may result in the occurrence of respiratory depression. Pruritus, urinary retention, and vomiting may occur but are not life threatening.

An older female patient has a severe visual deficit related to glaucoma. Which nursing action would be appropriate when providing care for this patient?

d. When caring for a patient who has a visual deficit, the nurse should indicate when the conversation is over and when he or she is leaving the room, assist with ambulation by walking slightly ahead of the person and allowing her to grasp the nurse's arm, provide diversions using other senses, and stay in the person's field of vision if she has partial or reduced peripheral vision.

A nurse is looking for trends in a postoperative patient's vital signs. Which documents would the nurse consult first?

d. While one recording of vital signs should appear on the admission nursing assessment, the best place to find sequential recordings that show a pattern or trend is the graphic record. The admission sheet does not include vital sign documentation, and neither does the activity flow sheet.

A nurse is caring for a newly placed gastrostomy tube of a postoperative patient. Which nursing action is performed correctly?

when caring for a new gastrostomy tube, the nurse would use a cotton-tipped applicator dipped in sterile saline to gently cleanse the area, removing any crust or drainage. The nurse would not use a washcloth with soap and water on a new gastrostomy tube, but may use this method if the site is healed. Also, once the sutures are removed, the nurse should rotate the external bumper 90 degrees once a day. The nurse should leave the site open to air unless there is drainage. If there is drainage, one thickness of precut gauze should be placed under the external bumper and changed as needed to keep the area dry.


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