NU 310 Chapter 16: End of Life Care
The nurse is caring for a client who has diminished lung function due to emphysema. The terminally ill client is short of breath on exertion and reports difficulty sleeping in bed. The client states, "I am so afraid of getting any worse." Which statement, by the nurse, assists the client in sustaining hope?
"I will talk with the health care provider to determine the next step in your care." (Rationale: The client is assisted in hopefulness by believing that the healthcare team will make his remaining days meaningful. By conveying a sense that the nurse will discuss the client's condition with the health care provider, the client recognizes that the healthcare team will use whatever treatment and comfort measures are available.)
According to federal guidelines, hospices may provide no more than what percentage of the aggregate annual patient-days at the inpatient level?
20
A nurse is working with the family of a terminally ill client, providing them with suggestions about how to manage the client's anorexia. Which statement by the family indicates that they have understood the instructions?
"We'll try adding powdered milk to milk and other foods to make them more nutritious."
All nurses care for clients who are grieving. It is important for the nurse to understand the grieving process for which reason?
Allows for the nurse to facilitate the grieving process
A terminally ill patient in pain asks the nurse to administer enough pain medication to end the suffering forever. What is the best response by the nurse?
"I will notify the physician that the current dose of medication is not relieving your pain."
A patient's family member asks the nurse what the purpose of hospice is. What is the best response by the nurse?
"It will enable the patient to remain home if that is what is desired."
A mother of three young children has been diagnosed with stage III breast cancer and is distraught. Which statement best communicates a spirit of hopefulness to this client?
"Let's take this one day at a time; remember you have your daughter's dance recital next week." (Rationale: Helping a client to find reasons to live and look forward to events promotes positive attitudes and ability to live for the moment, which in turn communicates a spirit of hopefulness. Reponses should not convey false hope to the client.)
Which statements made by the nurse demonstrates that the nurse is providing spiritually sensitive care?
"Tell me who or what gives you strength."
A dying patient wants to talk to the nurse. The patient states, "I know I'm dying, aren't I?" What would an appropriate nursing response be?
"This must be very difficult for you." (Rationale: The nurse should avoid making unhelpful responses that dismiss the patient's real concerns or defer the issue to another care provider. In response to the question "Am I dying?" the nurse could establish eye contact and follow with a statement acknowledging the patient's fears ("This must be very difficult for you") and an open-ended statement or question ("Tell me more about what is on your mind").)
A patient with end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is admitted to a hospice facility and asks the admitting nurse, "How long will I be allowed to stay here?" What is the best response by the nurse?
"When your stay reaches 6 months, you will be recertified for a continued stay."
Which of the following is an appropriate intervention for the client with pulmonary edema?
Administer the prescribed sedative to decrease anxiety.
A client states, "My children still need me. Why did I get cancer? I am only 30." This client is exhibiting which stage according to Kübler-Ross?
Anger
While providing care to a terminally ill client, the client's niece asks the nurse about the client's condition and prognosis. Which of the following would be most appropriate?
Ask the client's consent before sharing any information with the niece.
A nurse is caring for a client with a terminal illness. The client asks the nurse to help him end his own life to alleviate his suffering and that of his family. When responding to the client, the nurse integrates knowledge of which of the following?
Participating in assisted suicide violates the Code of Ethics for Nurses
As the moment of death approaches, which of the following does the nurse encourage the family to do?
Speak to the client in a calm and soothing voice. (Rationale: Sight and touch diminish as the client approaches death; however, hearing tends to remain intact. Speaking to the client calmly is most appropriate.)
A nurse has been providing in-home hospice care to an older adult client with lung cancer for more than six months. The family asks the nurse how long the Medicare hospice services will continue. What is the nurse's best response?
The Medicare hospice services can continue as long as the physician and hospice director agree about the client's terminal condition.
When describing the term "grief" to a group of students, which of the following would the instructor include?
The response experienced by anyone who has suffered a loss
A 90-year-old home care client's son has been designated to make decisions regarding the client's medical care when the client is no longer able to do so. As the client nears the end of life, the son is consulted on an ever-increasing basis. What legal instrument activates the son's decision-making designation?
durable power of attorney for health care
A type of comprehensive care for clients whose disease is not responsive to cure is
palliative care.
Glaser and Strauss (1965) identified four "awareness contexts." Which awareness context occurs when the client is unaware of their terminal state, whereas others are aware?
Closed awareness
The nurse practitioner has four patients with chronic illness that require consistent medical and nursing management. Select the condition that is the best example of a "chronically critical and progressively ill" condition.
End-stage renal disease
Based on the most common concern of a dying patient, the hospice nurse should:
Administer pain medication on a schedule that prevents pain from intensifying.
According to Kübler-Ross, when a dying client pleas for more time to reach an important goal, the client is in which state of grief?
Bargaining
A nurse is providing care to a client experiencing symptoms associated with terminal illness. Which of the following would be most appropriate to use as a means for managing the client's symptoms?
Client's goals
The nurse is providing care to a family who is facing a life-threatening illness. The nurse is assessing how family members bond and how the family works as a team. The nurse is assessing which of the following?
Cohesion and boundaries
A nurse is providing hospice care in Portland, Oregon to a client with terminal liver cancer. The client confides to the nurse, "I'm in agony all the time. I want this to be over now—please help me." Which interventions should the nurse implement? Select all that apply.
Control the client's pain with prescribed medication. Advise the client's health care provider of the client's condition. Encourage the client to explain his or her wishes.
The family members of a dying client are finding it difficult to verbalize their feelings for and show tenderness to the client. Which nursing interventions should a nurse perform in such a situation?
Encourage the family members to express their feelings and listen to them in their frank communication (Rationale: Family members usually find it difficult to communicate frankly with a dying person. By encouraging family members to express their feelings and listening to them as they frankly communicate, you may help family members feel more prepared to carry on a similarly honest dialogue with the dying client. It is not advisable for the nurse to encourage conversations about the impending death of the client. Being a silent observer or encouraging the family members to spend time with the dying client may not help the family members to express their feelings.)
Which of the following is an appropriate method of assessing the dying client?
Focus on the client's basic needs. (Rationale: Initially, nurses focus assessment on the client's basic physical needs, such as pain, breathing, nutrition, hydration, and elimination.)
A nurse is providing care to a client who has just been diagnosed with a terminal illness. Which of the following would be most appropriate for the nurse to do?
Listen nonjudgmentally while allowing time for client reflection.
The nurse is caring for a client who just learned of his terminal diagnosis. After the physician leaves, the nurse remains to answer further questions so that the client can make an informed decision about further treatment. By providing all available information, the nurse is promoting which ethical principle?
The principle of autonomy (Rationale: By promoting open discussion and informed decision making, the nurse is empowering the client to make his own decisions leading to autonomy.)
In spite of administering the prescribed pain medication, a dying client is still experiencing dyspnea due to fear and anxiety. Which nursing intervention should the nurse use to potentiate the effects of pain medication and help reduce the dyspnea?
Use imagery, humor, and progressive relaxation
The spouse of a terminally ill client is confused by the new terminology being used during discussions regarding the client's treatment. The nurse should explain that palliative care is:
care that will reduce the client's physical discomfort and manage clinical symptoms
A client and family are dealing with the client's recent terminal diagnosis. A nurse identifies a nursing diagnosis of hopelessness. Which of the following would be most helpful in supporting hope for this family? Select all that apply.
Arranging for appropriate psychosocial counseling Encouraging the client to participate in care to foster control Helping to obtain support from the community
A family of a dying client reports that their loved one is experiencing more shortness of breath. Which nursing intervention is most appropriate at this time?
Call the health care provider to obtain an oxygen order
Medicare and Medicaid hospice benefit criteria allow clients with a life expectancy of 6 months or less to be admitted to hospice. However, the median length of stay in a hospice program is just 21.3 days. Which reason explains the underuse of hospice care services?
Clients and families view hospice care as giving up
A client is declared to have a terminal illness. What intervention will a nurse perform related to the final decision of a dying client?
Respect the client's and family members' choices.
A client with a brain tumor recently stopped radiation and chemotherapy for treatment of the cancer. The client recently reported dry mouth. Which intervention by the hospice nurse demonstrates that the nurse understands treatment measures for dry mouth?
Provide gentle oral care after each meal.
Which is the initial stage of grief, according to Kübler-Ross?
denial
A terminally ill patient is admitted to the hospital. The patient grabs the nurse's hand and asks, "Am I dying?" What response would be best for the nurse to give?
"Tell me more about what's on your mind."
The family of a terminally ill client tells the nurse that the client has been breathing irregularly and, at times, it appears that he is not breathing at all. The client's daughter states, "He moans when he breathes. Is he in pain?" Which response by the nurse would be most appropriate?
"The moaning you hear is from air moving over very relaxed vocal cords."
The nurse identifies a nursing diagnosis of Imbalanced nutrition: less than body requirements for a terminally ill client who is near the end of life. Which of the following would the nurse expect to include in the client's plan of care?
Advice for the family to have fruit juices readily available at the client's bedside (Rationale: To promote nutrition in the terminally ill, the nurse would encourage the family to have fruit juices and milkshakes readily available at the bedside so that the client can access them frequently. Cool foods may be better tolerated than hot foods.)
A nurse has been working in hospice care for 10 years. Based on her experience, she drafts her plan of care with the understanding that the most significant barrier to improving care at the end of life is the:
Attitude of health care professionals toward terminal illness
A client diagnosed with a terminal illness appoints her oldest son as the authorized individual to make medical decisions on her behalf when she is no longer able to speak for herself. Which proxy directive is the patient using?
Durable power of attorney for health care (Rationale: A durable power of attorney for health care is also known as a health care power of attorney or a proxy directive. It allows another individual to make medical decisions on the client's behalf.)
A nurse is conducting a spiritual assessment of a terminally ill client using the four step FICA process and asks the question, "What gives your life meaning?" The nurse is assessing which of the following?
Faith and belief
Which action by the nurse demonstrates an effective method to assess the client and the client's family's ability to cope with end-of-life interventions?
Remaining silent, allowing the client and family to respond after asking a question related to end-of-life care (Rationale: A key to effective listening includes allowing the client and family sufficient time to reflect and respond after asking a question. Hospice nurses with effective listening skills resist the impulse to fill the empty space in communication with talk, avoid the impulse to give advice, and avoid responses indicating, "I know just how you feel.")
A nurse is evaluating a client with a terminal illness. What should the nurse report so that the health care team can consider alternative nutritional approaches and fluid administration routes for the client at the end of life?
weight loss and inadequate food intake (Rationale: The nurse should report weight loss and inadequate food intake so that the team can consider adding appetite stimulants and the nutritionist can alter the meal plan to give more satisfying meals as a comfort measure. The nurse knows that changes of gastrointestinal function such as irregular eating or bowel changes occur as part of the dying process and are not relevant to the desired intervention)
A nurse is providing in-home hospice care to a terminally ill client. The client experiences a medical crisis requiring monitoring and medication administration. Which level of hospice care would the nurse implement?
continuous care