Peds NSG 325 Week 2

अब Quizwiz के साथ अपने होमवर्क और परीक्षाओं को एस करें!

5) The nurse is counseling the parents of a 6-1/2-month-old infant. Which age-appropriate toy is most appropriate for the nurse to suggest to these parents? 1. Soft, fluid-filled ring that can be chilled in the refrigerator 2. Colorful rattle 3. Jack-in-the-box toy 4. Push-and-pull toy

Answer: 1 1. Soft, fluid-filled ring that can be chilled in the refrigerator

6) The telephone triage nurse at a pediatric clinic knows each call is important. Which call would require attentiveness from the nurse because of an increased risk of mortality? 1. A 3-week-old infant born at 35 weeks' gestation with gastroenteritis 2. A term 2-week-old infant of American Indian descent with an upper respiratory infection 3. A postterm 4-week-old infant non-Hispanic black descent with moderate emesis after feeding 4. A 1-week-old infant born at 40 weeks' gestation with symptoms of colic

Answer: 1 A 3-week-old infant born at 35 weeks' gestation with gastroenteritis

14) Which legal or ethical offense would be committed if a nurse tells family members the condition of a newborn baby without first consulting the parents? 1. A breach of privacy 2. Negligence 3. Malpractice 4. A breach of ethics

Answer: 1 A breach of privacy

20) A school-aged child is admitted with pneumococcal meningitis. The child weighs 44 pounds. The physician orders: ceftriaxone (Rocephin) 50 mg/kg/dose IV every 12 hours three times and then every 24 hours. Calculate how many mg/dose of ceftriaxone the child will receive and then calculate mL/hr to infuse via pump. Supply on hand is: a premix of ceftriaxone 1 g/50 mL, administer over 30 min

Answer: 1000 mg/dose; 100 mL/hr

15) Pediatric nurses have foundational knowledge obtained in nursing school and add specific competencies related to the pediatric client. Which would be considered an additional specific expected competency of the pediatric nurse? 1. Physical assessment 2. Anatomical and developmental differences 3. Nursing process 4. Management of healthcare conditions

Answer: 2 Anatomical and developmental differences

3) A school-age client tells you that "Grandpa, Mommy, Daddy, and my brother live at my house." Which type of family will the nurse identify in the medical record based on this description? 1. Binuclear family 2. Extended family 3. Gay or lesbian family 4. Traditional nuclear family

Answer: 2 Extended family

3) The nurse in a pediatric acute care unit is assigned the following tasks. Which task is not appropriate for the nurse to complete? 1. Diagnose an 8-year-old with acute otitis media and prescribe an antibiotic. 2. Listen to the concerns of an adolescent about being out of school for a lengthy surgical recovery. 3. Provide information to a mother of a newly diagnosed 4-year-old diabetic about local support-group options. 4. Diagnose a 6-year-old with Diversional Activity Deficit related to placement in isolation

Answer: 1 Diagnose an 8-year-old with acute otitis media and prescribe an antibiotic.

5) Several children arrived at the emergency department accompanied by their fathers. Which father may legally sign emergency medical consent for treatment? 1. The divorced one from the binuclear family 2. The stepfather from the blended or reconstituted family 3. The divorced one when the single-parent mother has custody 4. The nonbiologic one from the heterosexual cohabitating family

Answer: 1 The divorced one from the binuclear family

18) The nurse is providing care to an adolescent client who is dying. Which assessment findings indicate the client is experiencing a decrease in peripheral circulation? Select all that apply. 1. Cool skin 2. Mottled appearance 3. Cheyne-Stokes respirations 4. Increased agitation 5. Increased urine output

Answer: 1, 2 1. Cool skin 2. Mottled appearance

18) The adolescent is 6-hours postappendectomy and refuses pain medications. The nurse would like to walk the child in the hall but is concerned that the child has unrelieved pain. The nurse knows that unrelieved pain causes physiologic consequences such as (Select all that apply.) 1. Atelectasis 2. Pneumonia 3. Ileus 4. Lethargy 5. Hypoactive bowel sounds

Answer: 1, 2, 3 1. Atelectasis 2. Pneumonia 3. Ileus

11) The nurse is assigned to a child in a spica cast for a fractured femur suffered in an automobile accident. The child's teenage brother was driving the car, which was totaled. The nurse learns that the father lost his job three weeks ago and the mother has just accepted a temporary waitress job. Which nursing diagnosis will the nurse use when planning care for this child and family? 1. Compromised Family Coping Related to the Effects of Multiple Simultaneous Stressors 2. Impaired Social Interaction (Parent and Child) Related to the Lack of Family or Respite Support 3. Interrupted Family Processes Related to Child with Significant Disability Requiring Alteration in Family Functioning 4. Risk for Caregiver Role Strain Related to Child with a Newly Acquired Disability and the Associated Financial Burden

Answer: 1 1. Compromised Family Coping Related to the Effects of Multiple Simultaneous Stressors

12) A nurse is working with a pediatric client. When obtaining an accurate family assessment, which initial step is the most appropriate? 1. Establish a trusting relationship with the family. 2. Select the most relevant family-assessment tool. 3. Focus primarily upon the mother, while learning her greatest concern. 4. Observe the family in the home setting, since this step always proves indispensable.

Answer: 1 1. Establish a trusting relationship with the family.

6) The nurse is caring for a toddler client in the postoperative period. Which pain assessment tool is most appropriate for this client? 1. FLACC Behavioral Pain Assessment Scale 2. FACES pain scale 3. Oucher scale 4. Poker-chip tool

Answer: 1 1. FLACC Behavioral Pain Assessment Scale

10) The nurse is assessing a family's effective coping strategies and ineffective defensive strategies. Which family-social-system theory is the nurse using in this assessment of the family? 1. Family-stress theory 2. Family-development theory 3. Family-systems theory 4. Family life-cycle theory

Answer: 1 1. Family-stress theory

10) A school-age client is admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) in critical condition after a motor vehicle accident. Which intervention should be implemented at this time? 1. Maintain consistent caregivers. 2. Turn the lights off at night. 3. Keep alarm levels low. 4. Consult the hospital play therapist.

Answer: 1 1. Maintain consistent caregivers.

15) A toddler-age client is in end-stage renal failure. Which nursing intervention will assist this child most? 1. Maintain the child's normal routines. 2. Explain body changes that will take place. 3. Encourage friends to visit. 4. Allow the child to talk about the illness.

Answer: 1 1. Maintain the child's normal routines.

2) An adolescent client has a long leg cast secondary to a fractured femur. Which action by the nurse would effectively facilitate the adolescent's return to school? 1. Meet with teachers and administrators at the school to make sure entrances and classrooms are wheelchair accessible. 2. Develop an individualized health plan (IHP) that focuses on long-term needs of the adolescent. 3. Prior to the student's return to school, meet with all of the other students to emphasize the special needs of the injured teen. 4. Meet with parents of the injured student to encourage homebound schooling until a short leg cast is applied.

Answer: 1 1. Meet with teachers and administrators at the school to make sure entrances and classrooms are wheelchair accessible.

4) While assessing the development of a 9-month-old infant, the nurse asks the mother if the child actively looks for toys when they are placed out of sight. Which developmental task is the nurse assessing this infant for? 1. Object permanence 2. Centration 3. Transductive reasoning 4. Conservation

Answer: 1 1. Object permanence

5) A toddler is hospitalized with a fractured femur. In addition to pain medication, which will best provide pain relief for this child? 1. Parents' presence at the bedside 2. Age-appropriate toys 3. Deep-breathing exercises 4. Videos for the child to watch

Answer: 1 1. Parents' presence at the bedside

8) A supervisor is reviewing documentation of the nurses in the unit. Which client documentation is the most accurate and contains all the required part for a narrative entry? 1. "2/2/05 1630 Catheterized using an 8 French catheter, 45 mL clear yellow urine obtained, specimen sent to lab, squirmed and cried softly during insertion of catheter. Quiet in mother's arms following catheter removal. M. May RN" 2. "1/9/05 2 pm nasogastric tube placement confirmed and irrigated with 30 ml sterile water. Suction set at low, intermittent. Oxygen via nasal canal at 2 L/min. Nares patent, pink, and nonirritated. K. Earnst RN" 3. "4:00 tracheostomy dressing removed with dime-size stain of dry serous exudate. Site cleansed with normal saline. Dried with sterile gauze. New sterile tracheostomy sponge and trach ties applied. Respirations regular and even throughout the procedure. F. Luck RN" 4. "Feb. '05 Port-A-Cath assessed with Hu

Answer: 1 "2/2/05 1630 Catheterized using an 8 French catheter, 45 mL clear yellow urine obtained, specimen sent to lab, squirmed and cried softly during insertion of catheter. Quiet in mother's arms following catheter removal. M. May RN"

16) The nurse is working with a preschool-age client in Bryant traction for a fractured femur. Why is the Oucher Scale useful to the nurse caring for this child? 1. It provides continuity and consistency in assessing and monitoring the child's pain. 2. It decreases anxiety in the child. 3. It increases the child's comfort level. 4. It reduces the child's fear of painful procedures.

Answer: 1 . It provides continuity and consistency in assessing and monitoring the child's pain.

11) Parents of a child in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) have been experiencing shock and disbelief regarding their situation. Which statement by the parents indicates they are moving forward into the next stage of coping? 1. "Why not me instead of my child?" 2. "It is hard for me to have others take care of my child." 3. "I feel like life is suspended in time." 4. "I am glad I can help with his care."

Answer: 1 1. "Why not me instead of my child?"

2) During the nurse's initial assessment of a school-age child, the child reports a pain level of 6 out of 10. The child is lying quietly in bed watching television. Which action by the nurse is most appropriate? 1. Administer prescribed analgesic. 2. Ask the child's parents if they think the child is hurting. 3. Reassess the child in 15 minutes to see if the pain rating has changed. 4. Do nothing, since the child appears to be resting.

Answer: 1 1. Administer prescribed analgesic

13) A neonatal nurse who encourages parents to hold their baby and provides opportunities for Kangaroo Care most likely is demonstrating concern for which aspect of the infant's psychosocial development? 1. Attachment 2. Assimilation 3. Centration 4. Resilience

Answer: 1 1. Attachment

19) A novice nurse in the newborn intensive care unit (NICU) has just performed postmortem care on a premature infant who passed away. The novice nurse asks to be excused near the end of the shift. Which interventions can be implemented to support this nurse? Select all that apply. 1. Schedule additional education on bereavement care 2. Ask a seasoned nurse to talk with the novice nurse 3. Tell the nurse it is OK to grieve with the family 4. Recommend that the nurse transfer to another unit 5. Assign the nurse to stable clients only

Answer: 1, 2, 3 1. Schedule additional education on bereavement care 2. Ask a seasoned nurse to talk with the novice nurse 3. Tell the nurse it is OK to grieve with the family

17) The preschool-age child has been back from surgery for removal of a Wilm's tumor for 6 hours, the nurse anticipates the preschooler will need pain medication very soon. The nurse is aware that the preschool-age child may not complain of pain because Select all that apply. 1. The preschooler cannot give a description of his pain. 2. The preschooler may assume the nurse knows he has pain. 3. The preschooler may be afraid it may hurt more to have the pain treated. 4. The preschooler believes he must be brave. 5. The preschooler uses sleeping to deal with pain.

Answer: 1, 2, 3, 4 1. The preschooler cannot give a description of his pain. 2. The preschooler may assume the nurse knows he has pain. 3. The preschooler may be afraid it may hurt more to have the pain treated. 4. The preschooler believes he must be brave.

3) A young school-age child is in the pediatric intensive-care unit (PICU) with a fractured femur and head trauma. The child was not wearing a helmet while riding his new bicycle on the highway and collided with a car. Which nursing diagnoses may be appropriate for this family? Select all that apply. 1. Guilt Related to Lack of Child Supervision and Safety Precautions 2. Family Coping: Compromised, Related to the Critical Injury of the Child 3. Parental Role Conflict Related to Child's Injuries and PICU Policies 4. Knowledge Deficit Related to Home Care of Fractured Femur 5. Anger Related to Feelings of Helplessness

Answer: 1, 2, 3, 5 1. Guilt Related to Lack of Child Supervision and Safety Precautions 2. Family Coping: Compromised, Related to the Critical Injury of the Child 3. Parental Role Conflict Related to Child's Injuries and PICU Policies 5. Anger Related to Feelings of Helplessness

18) The nurse is assessing a toddler's development of communication skills. The nurse recognizes that a toddler communicates in what ways? Select all that apply. 1. Expressive jargon 2. Interpersonal skills and contact with other children 3. Uses all parts of speech 4. Temper tantrums 5. Enjoys talking

Answer: 1, 2, 4, 5 1. Expressive jargon 2. Interpersonal skills and contact with other children 4. Temper tantrums 5. Enjoys talking

12) A young school-age client is hospitalized with a fractured femur. Which assessment tools are appropriate for this client? Select all that apply. 1. FACES pain scale 2. Oucher scale 3. Visual Analog Scale 4. CRIES Scale 5. Poker-chip tool

Answer: 1, 2, 5 1. FACES pain scale 2. Oucher scale 5. Poker-chip tool

16) Which of the following are components of family-centered care? Select all that apply. 1. Recognizing and building on family strengths 2. Meeting the emotional, social, and developmental needs of the child and family 3. Respect all parenting practices 4. Support all cultural practices 5. Encourage parent-to-parent support

Answer: 1, 2, 5 1. Recognizing and building on family strengths 2. Meeting the emotional, social, and developmental needs of the child and family 5. Encourage parent-to-parent support

2) The emergency-room nurse receives a preschool-age child who was hit by a car. Which nursing interventions are a priority for this child? Select all that apply. 1. Performing a rapid head-to-toe assessment 2. Recording the parents' insurance information 3. Assessing airway, breathing, and circulation 4. Asking the parents about organ donation 5. Asking the parents if anyone witnessed the accident

Answer: 1, 3 1. Performing a rapid head-to-toe assessment 3. Assessing airway, breathing, and circulation

1) The nurse is admitting a school-age Vietnamese client who hit a parked car while riding a bike. The child has a fracture of the left radius and femur in addition to a fractured orbit. The child is stoic and denies pain. Which nursing actions are most appropriate in this situation? Select all that apply. 1. Use the FLACC scale to determine the child's pain level. 2. Tell the child to ring the call bell if the leg starts hurting. 3. Administer pain medication now and continue on a regular basis. 4. Ask the child's parents to notify the nurse if the child complains of pain. 5. Use the NIPS scale to determine the child's pain level.

Answer: 1, 3, 4 1. Use the FLACC scale to determine the child's pain level 3. Administer pain medication now and continue on a regular basis. 4. Ask the child's parents to notify the nurse if the child complains of pain.

10) A new parent group inquires about the stages through which their children will progress as they grow older. The nurse is discussing Piaget's developmental stages. In what order would the nurse expect the child to progress through Piaget's stages of development? 1. Sensorimotor 2. Formal operational 3. Preoperational 4. Concrete operational

Answer: 1, 3, 4, 2 1. Sensorimotor 3. Preoperational 4. Concrete operational 2. Formal operational

1) While in the pediatrician's office for their child's 12-month well-child exam, the parents ask the nurse for advice on age-appropriate toys for their child. Based on the child's developmental level, which types of toys would the nurse suggest? Select all that apply. 1. Soft toys that can be manipulated 2. Small toys that can pop apart and go back together 3. Jack-in-the-box toys 4. Toys with black and white patterns 5. Push-and-pull toys

Answer: 1, 3, 5 1. Soft toys that can be manipulated 3. Jack-in-the-box toys 5. Push-and-pull toys

17) The nurse is performing an assessment of the ecological systems of childhood. What will the nurse include when assessing mesosystems? Select all that apply. 1. Parental involvement in school 2. Local political influences 3. Libraries in the community 4. Influences of the religious community 5. Age of each family member

Answer: 1, 4 1. Parental involvement in school 4. Influences of the religious community

21) Match the child's concept of death with their behavioral response. A. Infant B. Toddler C. Preschool-age child D. School-age child E. Adolescent 1. Understands difference between temporary separation and death. 2. Senses emotions of caregivers and altered routines. 3. Capable of understanding death, recognizes all people and self will die. 4. No understanding of true concept of death. 5. Believes death is temporary and the person will return.

Answer: 1/D, 2/A, 3/E, 4/B, 5/C

9) A child is admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). The parents are concerned because they cannot stay for long hours to visit. Which statement made by the nurse is most appropriate? 1. "One of you might take a leave of absence to be here more." 2. "Parents often feel this way; would you be interested in talking with others who have experienced having a child in the NICU?" 3. "Perhaps the grandparents can make the visits for you." 4. "Why can't you visit after work every day?"

Answer: 2 2. "Parents often feel this way; would you be interested in talking with others who have experienced having a child in the NICU?"

6) The telephone triage nurse receives a call from a parent who states that her 18-month-old is making a crowing sound when he breathes and is hard to wake up. Which action by the nurse is the most appropriate? 1. Obtain the history of the illness from the parent. 2. Advise the parent to hang up and call 9-1-1. 3. Make an appointment for the child to see the healthcare provider. 4. Reassure the parent and provide instructions on home care for the child.

Answer: 2 2. Advise the parent to hang up and call 9-1-1.

17) Which intervention is considered supportive care for a family whose infant has died from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)? 1. Interviewing parents to determine the cause of the SIDS incident 2. Allowing parents to hold, touch, and rock the infant 3. Sheltering parents from the grief by not giving them any personal items of the infant, such as footprints 4. Advising parents that an autopsy is not necessary

Answer: 2 2. Allowing parents to hold, touch, and rock the infant

4) The nurse is providing care for several pediatric clients. Which client would require an Individualized Health Plan (IHP) prior to returning to school? 1. A school-age client who has recently developed a penicillin allergy 2. An adolescent client newly diagnosed with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus 3. A school-age client who has been treated for head lice 4. An adolescent client who has missed two weeks of school due to mononucleosis

Answer: 2 2. An adolescent client newly diagnosed with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus

7) A hospitalized toddler-age client needs to have an IV restarted. The child begins to cry when carried into the treatment room by the mother. Which nursing diagnosis is most appropriate? 1. Ineffective Individual Coping Related to an Invasive Procedure 2. Anxiety Related to Anticipated Painful Procedure 3. Fear Related to the Unfamiliar Environment 4. Knowledge Deficit of the Procedure

Answer: 2 2. Anxiety Related to Anticipated Painful Procedure

7) The nurse is working on parenting skills with a group of mothers. Which mother would need the fewest discipline-related suggestions? 1. Authoritarian 2. Authoritative 3. Indifferent 4. Permissive

Answer: 2 2. Authoritative

9) The nurse, talking with the parents of a toddler who is struggling with toilet training, reassures them that their child is demonstrating a typical developmental stage. According to Erikson, which developmental stage will the nurse document in the medical record for this toddler? 1. Trust versus mistrust 2. Autonomy versus shame and doubt 3. Initiative versus guilt 4. Industry versus inferiority

Answer: 2 2. Autonomy versus shame and doubt

4) A 7-year-old child is admitted for acute appendicitis. The parents are questioning the nurse about expectations during the child's recovery. Which information tool would be most useful in answering a parent's questions about the timing of key events? 1. Healthy People 2020 2. Clinical pathways 3. Child mortality statistics 4. National clinical practice guidelines

Answer: 2 2. Clinical pathways

9) As an advocate for the child undergoing bone-marrow aspiration, which intervention would the nurse suggest to decrease the pain experienced due to the procedure? 1. General anesthesia 2. Conscious sedation 3. Intravenous narcotics ten minutes before the procedure 4. Oral pain medication for discomfort after the procedure

Answer: 2 2. Conscious sedation

8) A parent asks the nurse if there is anything that can be done to reduce the pain that his 3-year-old experiences each morning when blood is drawn for lab studies. Which intervention would the nurse implement- based on the parent's concern? 1. Intravenous sedation 15 minutes prior to the procedure 2. EMLA cream (lidocaine 2.5% and prilocaine 2.5%) applied to skin at least one hour prior to the procedure 3. Use of guided imagery during the procedure 4. Use of muscle-relaxation techniques

Answer: 2 2. EMLA cream (lidocaine 2.5% and prilocaine 2.5%) applied to skin at least one hour prior to the procedure

14) There are several tools that help with obtaining a cultural assessment of a client and his family. Which tool would be appropriate to gather 12 major concepts of cultural assessment? 1. Sunrise enabler 2. Model for cultural competence 3. Transcultural assessment model 4. Health traditions model

Answer: 2 2. Model for cultural competence

3) The community-health nurse is planning an education session for recently hired teachers at a child-care center. Which item is priority for the community-health nurse to include in the educational session? 1. The schedule for immunizations 2. Principles of infection control 3. How to interpret healthcare records 4. How to take a temperature

Answer: 2 2. Principles of infection control

6) An adolescent client has a stiff neck, a headache, a fever of 103 degrees Fahrenheit, and purpuric lesions noted on the legs. Although the adolescent's physical needs take priority at the present time, the nurse can expect which to be the most significant psychological stressor for this adolescent? 1. Separation from parents and home 2. Separation from friends and permanent changes in appearance 3. Fear of painful procedures and bodily mutilation 4. Fear of getting behind in schoolwork

Answer: 2 2. Separation from friends and permanent changes in appearance

14) The nurse is preparing to perform a heel stick on a neonate. Which complementary therapy is appropriate for the nurse to use decrease pain during this quick but painful procedure? 1. Swaddling 2. Sucrose pacifier 3. Massage 4. Holding the infant

Answer: 2 2. Sucrose pacifier

12) A child is on a ventilator in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Which nursing intervention would best meet the psychosocial needs of this child? 1. Allow the parents to remain at the bedside. 2. Touch and talk to the child often. 3. Provide the child with a blanket from home. 4. Provide consistent caregivers.

Answer: 2 2. Touch and talk to the child often.

5) The nurse recognizes that the pediatric client is from a cultural background different from that of the hospital staff. Which goal is most appropriate for this client when planning nursing care? 1. Overlook or minimize the differences that exist. 2. Facilitate the family's ability to comply with the care needed. 3. Avoid inadvertently offending the family by imposing the nurse's perspective. 4. Encourage complementary beneficial cultural practices as primary therapies.

Answer: 2 Facilitate the family's ability to comply with the care needed.

13) What is the pediatric nurse's best defense against an accusation of malpractice or negligence? 1. Following the physician's written orders 2. Meeting the scope and standards of practice for pediatric nursing 3. Being a nurse practitioner or clinical nurse specialist 4. Acting on the advice of the nurse manager

Answer: 2 Meeting the scope and standards of practice for pediatric nursing

9) A 12-year-old pediatric client is in need of surgery. Which member of the healthcare team is legally responsible for obtaining informed consent for an invasive procedure? 1. Nurse 2. Physician 3. Unit secretary 4. Social worker

Answer: 2 Physician

18) The nurse is counseling the parents of a 13-year-old regarding the behaviors they may encounter after telling the child about their plans to divorce. Which behaviors could the child demonstrate? Select all that apply. 1. Sorrow 2. Skipping school 3. Risk-taking 4. Withdraw from friends and activities 5. Temper tantrums

Answer: 2, 3 2. Skipping school 3. Risk-taking

16) The nurse is planning care for a school-age client and family who have expressed wanting to use complementary and alternative modalities (CAM) in the treatment plan. Which interventions can the nurse safely implement into the plan of care? Select all that apply. 1. Substituting an herbal remedy for a prescribed medication 2. Encouraging the parents to share which modalities they would like to implement 3. Educating on the benefits and risks for each modality 4. Using essential oils to decrease nausea 5. Discouraging the use of faith-based therapies

Answer: 2, 3, 4 2. Encouraging the parents to share which modalities they would like to implement 3. Educating on the benefits and risks for each modality 4. Using essential oils to decrease nausea

1) The nurse is planning care for an adolescent client who will be hospitalized for several weeks following a traumatic brain injury. Which interventions will enhance family-centered care for this client and family? Select all that apply. 1. Making all ADL decisions for the adolescent and family 2. Asking the adolescent what foods to include during meal time 3. Allowing the family time to pray each day with the adolescent 4. Encouraging the adolescent's friends to visit during visiting hours 5. Leaving all questions for the healthcare provider

Answer: 2, 3, 4 Asking the adolescent what foods to include during meal time 3. Allowing the family time to pray each day with the adolescent 4. Encouraging the adolescent's friends to visit during visiting hours

2) A nurse is working with pediatric clients in a research facility. The nurse recognizes that federal guidelines are in place that delineate which pediatrics clients must give assent for participation in research trials. Based upon the client's age, the nurse would seek assent from which children? Select all that apply. 1. The precocious 4-year-old commencing as a cystic fibrosis research-study participant. 2. The 7-year-old leukemia client electing to receive a newly developed medication, now being researched. 3. The 10-year-old commencing in an investigative study for clients with precocious puberty. 4. The 13-year-old client commencing participation in a research program for Attention Deficit

Answer: 2, 3, 4 The 7-year-old leukemia client electing to receive a newly developed medication, now being researched. 3. The 10-year-old commencing in an investigative study for clients with precocious puberty. 4. The 13-year-old client commencing participation in a research program for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) treatments.

17) A nurse and the family of an 8-year-old with acute renal failure are reviewing family strengths helpful in managing stressors. Which family strengths should the nurse recommend this family utilize? Select all that apply. 1. Meeting member needs 2. Support by extended family 3. Effective communication 4. Receiving and giving love 5. Prior life experiences

Answer: 2, 3, 5 2. Support by extended family 3. Effective communication 5. Prior life experiences

16) Which nursing interventions would be best for the nursing diagnosis of Powerlessness Related to Relinquishing Control to the Healthcare Team? Select all that apply. 1. Provide a primary nursing care model. 2. Prepare the child in advance for procedures. 3. Provide optimal pain relief. 4. Explain procedures in developmentally appropriate terms. 5. Incorporate home rituals when possible.

Answer: 2, 4, 5 2. Prepare the child in advance for procedures. 4. Explain procedures in developmentally appropriate terms. 5. Incorporate home rituals when possible.

19) A child with hives weighing 40 pounds is prescribed diphenhydramine (Benadryl), 5 mg/kg/day in four divided doses. How many milligrams should the nurse give for each dose?

Answer: 22.75 mg/dose Explanation: Convert 40 pounds to kilograms (18.18) multiply by 5 mg = 90.9 divided by 4 doses = 22.75 mg/dose

12) Which nursing intervention is most appropriate when providing education to the pediatric client and family? 1. Giving primary care for high-risk children who are in hospital settings 2. Giving primary care for healthy children 3. Working toward the goal of informed choices with the family 4. Obtaining a physician consultation for any technical procedures at delivery

Answer: 3 . Working toward the goal of informed choices with the family

14) Which statement by the nurse is most appropriate prior to giving an intramuscular injection to a 2-1/2-year-old child? 1. "We will give you your shot when your mommy comes back." 2. "This is medicine that will make you better. First we will hold your leg, then I will wipe it off with this magic cloth that kills the germs on your leg right here, then I will hold the needle like this and say 'one, two, three . . . go' and give you your shot. Are you ready?" 3. "It is all right to cry, I know that this hurts. After we are done you can go to the box and pick out your favorite sticker." 4. "This is a magic sword that will give you your medicine and make you all better."

Answer: 3 3. "It is all right to cry, I know that this hurts. After we are done you can go to the box and pick out your favorite sticker."

10) A school-age client is being discharged from the outpatient surgical center. Which statement by the parent would indicate the need for further teaching? 1. "I can expect my child to have some pain for the next few days." 2. "I will plan to give my child pain medicine around the clock for the next day or so." 3. "Since my child just had surgery today, I can expect the pain level to be higher tomorrow." 4. "I will call the office tomorrow if the pain medicine is not relieving the pain."

Answer: 3 3. "Since my child just had surgery today, I can expect the pain level to be higher tomorrow."

15) The parents of a 1-year-old infant are concerned that this baby seems more shy and scared of new situations than their other child and ask the nurse if this is normal. The nurse knows that the infant is exhibiting a characteristic of the "slow-to-warm-up." Which statement to the parents is most appropriate by the nurse? 1. "Your infant is showing a regularity in patterns of eating." 2. "Your infant displays a predominately negative mood." 3. "Your infant initially reacts to new situations by withdrawing." 4. "Your infant has intense reactions to the environment."

Answer: 3 3. "Your infant initially reacts to new situations by withdrawing."

6) A nurse is assessing language development in all the infants presenting at the doctor's office for well-child visits. At which age range would the nurse expect a child to verbalize the words "dada" and "mama"? 1. 3 and 5 months 2. 6 and 8 months 3. 9 and 12 months 4. 13 and 18 months

Answer: 3 3. 9 and 12 months

13) Which client in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) would most benefit from palliative care? 1. A child with end-stage leukemia 2. A child with a broken arm after a motor vehicle accident 3. A child with burn injuries to the legs 4. A child with recurrent asthma

Answer: 3 3. A child with burn injuries to the legs

8) A school-age child with congenital heart block codes in the emergency department (ED). The parents witness this and stare at the resuscitation scene unfolding before them. Which nursing intervention is most appropriate in this situation? 1. Ask the parents to leave until the child has stabilized. 2. Ask the parents to call the family to come into watch the resuscitation. 3. Ask the parents to sit near the child's face and hold her hand. 4. Ask the parents to stand at the foot of the cart to watch.

Answer: 3 3. Ask the parents to sit near the child's face and hold her hand

11) The nurse is caring for a child who has been sedated for a painful procedure. Which nursing activity is the priority for this child? 1. Allow parents to stay with the child. 2. Monitor pulse oximetry. 3. Assess the child's respiratory effort. 4. Place the child on a cardiac monitor.

Answer: 3 3. Assess the child's respiratory effort.

9) The nurse is working on parenting skills with a mother of three children. The nurse demonstrates a strategy that uses reward to increase positive behavior. Which strategy will the nurse document in the medical record based on this description? 1. Time out 2. Reasoning 3. Behavior modification 4. Experiencing consequences of misbehavior

Answer: 3 3. Behavior modification

13) The nurse is assessing a group of children attending summer camp. The nurse will expect which children to most likely have problems perceiving a sense of belonging? 1. Children whose parents divorced recently 2. Children who gained a stepparent recently 3. Children recently placed into foster care 4. Children adopted as infants

Answer: 3 3. Children recently placed into foster care

15) Cultures have many different childrearing practices. Which culture is known to value the male child more than the female child, and often teaches children to avoid displaying emotion? 1. Mexican 2. Amish 3. Chinese 4. Navajo

Answer: 3 3. Chinese

5) The school nurse is preparing a plan of care specific to several children in the school who have asthma. What is the initial action on the plan of care? 1. Call 911 to request emergency medical assistance. 2. Call the child's parents to come and pick up the child. 3. Have the child use his or her metered-dose inhaler. 4. Have the child lie down to see if the symptoms subside.

Answer: 3 3. Have the child use his or her metered-dose inhaler

8) The nurse in the pediatric clinic observes a parental lack of warmth and interest toward the child. Which parental style will the nurse most likely document in this situation? 1. Authoritarian 2. Authoritative 3. Indifferent 4. Permissive

Answer: 3 3. Indifferent

7) The parents of an 8-year-old state that their son seems very interested in trying new activities. When the parents ask for suggested activities for this age child, the nurse recommends scouts as an activity that will foster growth and development. In which stage of Erikson's "psychosocial stages of development" is this child? 1. Trust versus mistrust 2. Initiative versus guilt 3. Industry versus inferiority 4. Identity versus role confusion

Answer: 3 3. Industry versus inferiority

8) Two 3-year-olds are playing in a hospital playroom together. One is working on a puzzle while the other is stacking blocks. Which type of play are these children exhibiting? 1. Cooperative play 2. Associative play 3. Parallel play 4. Solitary play

Answer: 3 3. Parallel play

2) A mother of a school-age client who recently had surgery for the removal of tonsils and adenoids complains that the child has begun sucking his thumb again. Which coping mechanisms is the child using to cope with the surgery and hospitalization? 1. Repression 2. Rationalization 3. Regression 4. Fantasy

Answer: 3 3. Regression

12) An adolescent client with cystic fibrosis suddenly becomes noncompliant with the medication regime. Which intervention by the nurse will most likely improve compliance for this client? 1. Give the child a computer-animated game that presents information on the management of cystic fibrosis. 2. Arrange for the physician to sit down and talk to the child about the risks related to noncompliance with medications. 3. Set up a meeting with some older teens with cystic fibrosis who have been managing their disease effectively. 4. Discuss with the child's parents the privileges that can be taken away, such as cell phone, if compliance fails to improve.

Answer: 3 3. Set up a meeting with some older teens with cystic fibrosis who have been managing their disease effectively.

15) A preschool-age client is hospitalized following surgery for a ruptured appendix. During assessment of the child, the nurse notes that the child is sleeping. Vital signs are as follows: temperature 97.8 degrees F axillary, pulse 90, respirations 12, and blood pressure 100/60. Which conclusion by the nurse is appropriate based on the assessment findings? 1. The client is comfortable and the pain is controlled. 2. The client is in shock secondary to blood loss during surgery. 3. The client is experiencing respiratory depression secondary to opioid administration for postoperative pain. 4. The client is sleeping to avoid pain associated with surgery.

Answer: 3 3. The client is experiencing respiratory depression secondary to opioid administration for postoperative pain.

6) The community health nurse is assessing several families for various strengths and needs in regard to after-school and backup childcare arrangements. Which family type will benefit the most from this assessment and subsequent interventions? 1. The binuclear family 2. The extended family 3. The single-parent family 4. The traditional nuclear family

Answer: 3 3. The single-parent family

7) Despite the availability of Children's Health Insurance Programs (CHIP), many eligible children are not enrolled. Which nursing intervention would be the most appropriate to help children become enrolled in CHIP? 1. Assess details of the family's income and expenditures 2. Case management to limit costly, unnecessary duplication of services 3. Advocate for the child by encouraging the family to investigate SCHIP eligibility 4. Educate the family about the need for keeping regular well-child-visit appointments

Answer: 3 Advocate for the child by encouraging the family to investigate SCHIP eligibility

11) A 12-year-old child is admitted to the unit for a surgical procedure. The child is accompanied by two parents and a younger sibling. What is the level of involvement in treatment decision making for this child? 1. Emancipated minor 2. Mature minor 3. Assent 4. None

Answer: 3 Assent

16) The nurse educator is presenting a lecture about risks to developmental progression. Which items will the educator include in the lecture? Select all that apply. 1. Family support 2. Access to the Internet 3. Recent loss of employment 4. Terminal illness of a family member 5. Hazards within the home environment

Answer: 3, 4, 5 3. Recent loss of employment 4. Terminal illness of a family member 5. Hazards within the home environment

11) While trying to inform a young school-age client about what will occur during an upcoming CT scan, the nurse notices that the child is engaged in a collective monologue, talking about a new puppy. Which response by the nurse is the most appropriate in this situation? 1. "Please stop talking about your puppy. I need to tell you about your CT scan." 2. Ignore the child's responses and continue discussing the procedure. 3. "I'll come back when you are ready to talk with me more about your CT scan." 4. "You must be so excited to have a new puppy! They are so much fun. Now, let me tell you again about going downstairs in a wheelchair to a special room."

Answer: 4 4. "You must be so excited to have a new puppy! They are so much fun. Now, let me tell you again about going downstairs in a wheelchair to a special room."

4) The nurse must prepare parents to see their adolescent daughter in the pediatric intensive-care unit (PICU). The child arrived by life flight after experiencing multiple traumas in a car accident involving a suspected drunk driver. At this time, which statement by the nurse to the family is the most appropriate? 1. "Don't worry; everything will be okay. We will take excellent care of your child." 2. "You should press charges against the drunk driver." 3. "Your child's leg was crushed and may have to be amputated." 4. "Your child's condition is very critical; her face is swollen, and she may not look like herself."

Answer: 4 4. "Your child's condition is very critical; her face is swollen, and she may not look like herself."

4) The nurse is working in a pediatric surgical unit. In discussing patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) in a preoperative parental meeting, which client would be a candidate for PCA? 1. Developmentally delayed 16-year-old, postoperative bone surgery 2. A 5-year-old, postoperative tonsillectomy 3. A 10-year-old who has a fractured femur and concussion from a bike accident 4. A 12-year-old, postoperative spinal fusion for scoliosis

Answer: 4 4. A 12-year-old, postoperative spinal fusion for scoliosis

1) The community-health nurse visits the child-care center. Which finding indicates the need for staff education? 1. A group of 2-year-olds are eating a snack of Cheerios. 2. Several 4-year-olds are outside playing on a slide. 3. An 18-month-old is pushing a toy truck. 4. A 2-month-old is sleeping in a crib on his stomach.

Answer: 4 4. A 2-month-old is sleeping in a crib on his stomach.

7) A school bus carrying children in grades K-12 crashed into a ravine. The critically injured children were transported by ambulance and admitted to the pediatric intensive-care unit (PICU). The nurse is concerned about calming the frightened children. Which nursing intervention is most appropriate to achieve the goal of calming the frightened children? 1. Tell the children that the physicians are competent. 2. Assure the children that the nurses are caring. 3. Explain that the PICU equipment is state of the art. 4. Call the children's parents to come into the PICU.

Answer: 4 4. Call the children's parents to come into the PICU.

3) A school-age client has been receiving morphine every two hours for postoperative pain as ordered. The medication relieves the pain for approximately 90 minutes, and then the pain returns. Which action by the nurse is the most appropriate? 1. Tell the child that pain medication cannot be administered more frequently than every two hours. 2. Reposition the child and quietly leave the room. 3. Inform the parents that the child is dependent on the medication. 4. Call the healthcare provider to see if the child's orders for pain medication can be changed.

Answer: 4 4. Call the healthcare provider to see if the child's orders for pain medication can be changed.

13) The nurse is caring for a child who has a long leg cast. The child complains of increasing pain in the toes of the casted foot. Which initial action by the nurse is the most appropriate? 1. Call the healthcare provider to report increasing pain 2. Administer pain medication 3. Reposition the child in bed 4. Check to see if the cast is too tight

Answer: 4 4. Check to see if the cast is too tight

2) A new pediatric hospital will open soon. While planning nursing care, the hospital administration is considering two models of providing healthcare: family-focused care and family-centered care. Which action best demonstrates family-centered care? 1. Telling the family what must be done for the family's health 2. Assuming the role of an expert professional to direct the healthcare 3. Intervening for the child and family as a unit 4. Conferring with the family in deciding which healthcare option will be chosen

Answer: 4 4. Conferring with the family in deciding which healthcare option will be chosen

14) Siblings of a client in pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) are preparing to visit their brother, who was hit by a car while riding his bike. Which intervention by the nurse will assist the siblings in preparing for the visit? 1. Spend time developing a relationship with the siblings. 2. Have the parents go with the siblings when they visit. 3. Encourage the siblings to talk to a social worker before seeing their brother. 4. Explain what the siblings will hear and see when they visit.

Answer: 4 4. Explain what the siblings will hear and see when they visit.

1) The parents of a toddler-age child who sustained severe head trauma from falling out a second-story window are arguing in the pediatric intensive-care unit (PICU) and blaming each other for the child's accident. Which nursing diagnosis is most appropriate for this family? 1. Parental Role Conflict Related to Protecting the Child 2. Hopelessness Related to the Child's Deteriorating Condition 3. Anxiety Related to the Critical-Care-Unit Environment 4. Family Coping: Compromised, Related to the Child's Critical Injury

Answer: 4 4. Family Coping: Compromised, Related to the Child's Critical Injury

5) An adolescent with cystic fibrosis is intubated with an endotracheal tube. Which nursing diagnosis is most appropriate for this adolescent? 1. Potential for Imbalanced Nutrition, More Than Body Requirements Related to Inactivity 2. Anxiety Related to Leaving Chores Undone at Home 3. Potential for Fear of Future Pain Related to Medical Procedures 4. Powerlessness (Moderate) Related to Inability to Speak to or Communicate with Friends

Answer: 4 4. Powerlessness (Moderate) Related to Inability to Speak to or Communicate with Friends

3) While being comforted in the emergency department, a young school-age sibling of a pediatric trauma victim blurts out to the nurse, "It's my fault! When we were fighting yesterday, I told him I wished he was dead!" Which response is most appropriate by the nurse? 1. Asking the child if she would like to sit down and drink some water 2. Sitting the child down in an empty room with markers and paper so that she can draw a picture 3. Calmly discussing the catheters, tubes, and equipment that the patient requires and explaining to the sibling why the patient needs them 4. Reassuring the child that it is normal to get angry and say things that we do not mean but that we have no control over whether or not an accident happens

Answer: 4 4. Reassuring the child that it is normal to get angry and say things that we do not mean but that we have no control over whether or not an accident happens

10) A child is being prepared for an invasive procedure. The mother of the child has legal custody but is not present. After details of the procedure are explained, who can provide legal consent on behalf of a minor child for treatment? 1. The divorced parent without custody 2. A cohabitating boyfriend of the child's mother 3. A grandparent who lives in the home with the child 4. A babysitter with written proxy

Answer: 4 A babysitter with written proxy

4) The nurse is performing an assessment of a child's biologic family history. Which situation would necessitate the nurse's asking the mother for information should use the term "child's father" instead of "your husband"? 1. Traditional nuclear family 2. Traditional extended family 3. Two-income nuclear family 4. Cohabitating informal stepfamily

Answer: 4 Cohabitating informal stepfamily

2) A new pediatric hospital will open soon. While planning nursing care, the hospital administration is considering two models of providing healthcare: family-focused care and family-centered care. Which action best demonstrates family-centered care? 1. Telling the family what must be done for the family's health 2. Assuming the role of an expert professional to direct the healthcare 3. Intervening for the child and family as a unit 4. Conferring with the family in deciding which healthcare option will be chosen

Answer: 4 Conferring with the family in deciding which healthcare option will be chosen

1) Which nursing role is not directly involved when providing family-centered approach to the pediatric population? 1. Advocacy 2. Case management 3. Patient education 4. Researcher

Answer: 4 Researcher

17) A three-week-old infant is returned post-pyloromyotomy three hours ago. The father is refusing pain medication for the infant and states, "The baby is hungry. Can I give the baby a bottle?" How should the nurse best advocate for the infant? Select all that apply. 1. Call the physician to ask if the child can feed yet. 2. The FLACC scale rating is 8 out of 10; try swaddling and rocking the infant. 3. Ask the parent to obtain a FLACC scale rating and let the nurse know what rating they get. 4. Educate the parent about the surgery and why the infant should not have anything by mouth. 5. Inform the parent about the meaning of the pain scale and the need for pain medication.

Answer: 4, 5 4. Educate the parent about the surgery and why the infant should not have anything by mouth. 5. Inform the parent about the meaning of the pain scale and the need for pain medication.


संबंधित स्टडी सेट्स

PHA613: TERMINOLOGIES AND 10-STAR PHARMACIST

View Set

Intro to Business - Ch 16 Financial Management and Securities Market

View Set

Chapter 28 Face and Neck injuries

View Set

Chapter 2, Convergence & the Reshaping Of Mass Comm.

View Set

Abeka Grade 5 Old World History Quiz 31

View Set

Module 8-Pharmacology and IV Therapies

View Set

Authorized Relationships, Duties, and Disclosures

View Set