Fundamentals of Nursing Course Point Quiz- CH. 4
The nurse enters the client's room in the acute care unit immediately after the client experiences a generalized tonic-clonic type seizure in bed. What is the first action the nurse should take?
Position the client in a side-lying position.
A nurse is working at a community clinic that serves mostly families with young children. What would be a priority intervention for clients in this developmental stage?
Setting up parenting classes
The nurse receives an 8-year-old client in the pediatric unit following a tonsillectomy. Which assessment finding requires immediate intervention by the nurse?
The client makes a rattling noise when breathing through the mouth.
The home health nurse is making an initial assessment visit to a family that consists of two parents and twin 3-year-old boys. During the interview, the nurse is most concerned if the client makes which statement?
The father states, "I don't discuss money matters with my wife because I don't want her to worry."
A family assessment of a father, mother, and four children has suggested the presence of several risk factors. Which aspect of the family's structure and function would be considered a psychosocial risk factor?
The parents have a tumultuous relationship, with frequent separations in the past.
Which statement is true regarding Friedman's theory of family-centered nursing care?
The role of the family is essential in every level of nursing practice.
The nurse on the elective surgery floor receives a report that describes the client's abdominal wound dressing as having a moderate amount of yellowish and bloody drainage on it and a very foul smell. In planning for a dressing change, it is most important for the nurse to perform which action?
Wash the nurse's hands before and after the dressing change.
A home health nurse is visiting a family after the recent death of their matriarch. The nurse observes that the family is dressed in black, all of the mirrors are covered, and that the immediate family is sitting on square wooden boxes instead of chairs. The nurse asks what is happening, and is told, "We are Jewish, and the family is 'Sitting Shiva'." This family is fulfilling which family function?
affective and coping functions
The nurse is assessing the family structure of the client. The family household comprises two parents, three children, and one grandparent. The nurse recognizes that this is a(n):
extended family.
A nurse is providing care for client who experienced a stroke. Which nursing intervention reflects the tertiary level of prevention?
provide care transition at discharge for speech therapy
A nurse is planning education on self-administration of insulin to the client and the client's family members. The client asks the nurse why the family members are also included in the teaching. What should the nurse's response be?
"Family members are equally involved in planning and implementation of care."
A nursing student's parents are both physicians. The nursing instructor may feel the student has
Been socialized in healthcare
What is an example of a community risk factor?
Children are kept inside on a sunny day due to a lack of recreational opportunities.
A community is defined as a social group that may or may not share common geographic boundaries yet interact because of
Common interests
A client says, "I live in a small community on the northwest side of the city." Why does the nurse consider it significant that the client reports living in a community rather than a neighborhood?
Community indicates people who share similar characteristics.
A nurse is developing a plan of care for a client to meet the client's self-actualization needs. The nurse would focus on which area as most important?
Emphasizing the client's strengths
The nurse is aware that basic client needs must be met before a client can focus on higher ones. According to Maslow's hierarchy of human needs, which example would be the highest priority for a client after physiologic needs have been met?
Grab bars are installed in a client bathroom to facilitate safe showering.
Which are stressors that affect the health of the family?
Inadequate childcare services
A young couple who have been married less than a year are having difficulty with adjusting to parenting. What is a contributing factor to this level of maladjustment?
Limited time in learning to be a marital partner
A client is experiencing a stress response each time the family visits the room. What nursing intervention is most appropriate?
limit the family visits to once daily
During the nurse's admission interview the client says, "I don't get too much rest because I am in nursing school and work full time to support myself and my kids." The nurse classifies this statement as an issue at which level of Maslow's basic needs?
Physiologic
Which action by the nurse demonstrates the nurse's efforts to meet the client's self-actualization needs?
The nurse arranges for the client's clergy to visit after visiting hours.
In the implementation of effective client care, the nurse should
assess the client's family dynamics and community.
A nurse is assessing a family with adolescents. The family consists of a father, mother, a 13-year-old son, a 14-year-old son from a previous marriage, and a 16-year-old daughter. Which statement by the parents would lead the nurse to suspect a potential risk factor for altered health with this family?
"Our 16-year-old just seems to butt heads with us at every turn."
A nurse is caring for a client newly diagnosed with diabetes mellitus and developing a holistic plan of care. For this plan of care to be successful, it must what?
Address the disease but also incorporate the mind, body, and spirit.
A nurse working with patients in a community is aware that which is a true statement related to environmental factors in that community?
Barriers to accessing health care within a community may include lack of transportation.
The parents of a blended family have a baby boy age six months who is due for immunizations. The clinic closest to their home has recently closed, and they feel intimidated by the prospect of going to the large, university hospital near their home. Which type of factor is the primary influence on this aspect of the family's health?
Community health care structure
A community-based nurse acts as a case manager for a small town about 60 miles from a major healthcare center. What is the most important factor of community-based nursing for this nurse to be knowledgeable about?
Community resources available to clients
A client with persistent nausea is diagnosed with somatization. What is the appropriate nursing action when the client reports nausea?
sit with the client and ask them about their feelings
The nurse is taking care of a client who is scheduled for a mastectomy. The client tells the nurse that the client is apprehensive about the operation and asks the nurse to read a passage from the Koran to help prepare the client for surgery. Which action by the nurse is the most appropriate?
Read the Koran passage to the client.
The nurse performs an assessment of the client and the family to have a better understanding of client and family needs. Which is an individual need?
Safety
The nurse assists a postoperative client with ambulation. The nurse recognizes that assisting the client when performing this skill meets which of Maslow's basic human needs?
Safety and security
The nurse is assessing the communication style of the client. Communication is an example of which dimension of the individual?
Sociocultural dimension
A nurse is assisting a neurologist, who is assessing the norepinephrine (noradrenaline) level of a client who is reporting stress. Which function does norepinephrine (noradrenaline) perform?
heightens arousal and increases energy
Which client requires priority intervention by a nurse providing care on a medical-surgical unit?
A postsurgical client who is feeling dizzy and has a heart rate of 45 beats/min
An 85-year-old client is being transferred from a house to a nursing home by the client's spouse. What is the first action the nurse should take to help reduce the stress of relocation on the client?
Assess the client's usual lifestyle and daily activities.
The nurse in the adolescent in-patient psychiatric unit is interviewing the family of a 16-year-old client admitted for depression and threatened suicide. What assessment information is most essential for the nurse in determining the affective and coping function of the family?
Family patterns of communication
The nurse is assessing a family parented by a 60-year-old grandmother and three school-age grandchildren. The nurse is aware that which problem may occur in a single-parent family at a greater level than in other types of families?
Increased financial concerns
Parents raising two school-aged children incorporate their religious beliefs into the family's daily life. The family's beliefs regarding religion include dietary considerations, worship practices, attitudes, and values. This is an example of which function of the family?
Socialization
A nurse is working with a single-parent family. When planning the care for this family, which need would the nurse anticipate as being a priority concern? Select all that apply.
Financial concerns Shift in roles
A nurse is caring for an adolescent who lost a leg in a motor vehicle accident. Which human need would the nurse most likely need to address?
Self-esteem needs
A nurse is implementing interventions that focus on protecting a client from physical and emotional harm. Which category of needs is the nurse addressing?
Safety and security
The nurse is explaining the expected developmental tasks of a typical family with adolescents. Which of the following would be incorrect for the nurse to include?
Adjustment to retirement
The nurse is admitting a 38-year-old client to the oncology unit whose religious background is different from the nurse's own. The nurse is assessing how the client's religion may affect the client's health care needs. Which question by the nurse is the best way to consider the client's religious practices in the plan of care?
"What can we do to help you meet any religious needs you may have?"
The nurse is conducting a family assessment of a traditional family. Which assessment data cue describes the socioeconomic status of the family?
The father is an engineer and the mother is an elementary school teacher.
Which theorist supports the developmental framework of family assessment?
Duvall
A nurse is reviewing a journal article about basic human needs and how they can be applied as a framework for prioritizing nursing care. Place the interventions listed below in order of priority, based on client needs. Use all options.
Ensuring adequate fluid intake Encouraging the client's spiritual practices Referring the client to a support group Encouraging the client to set attainable goals Providing education focusing on the client's strengths to maximize potential
A nurse is providing care to a client who is feeling lonely and isolated. In an effort to develop a trusting nurse-client relationship, the nurse exhibits a caring attitude, ensures the client's privacy, and spends time with the client to promote therapeutic communication. The nurse is meeting which category of client needs?
Love and belonging