Medical Surgical
Medical Surgical
Medical Surgical
1.
40.
If the client w/ increased ICP
demonstrates decorticate posturing,
observe for flexion of elbows,
extension of the knees, plantar flexion
of the feet,
41.
The nursing diagnosis that would
have the highest priority in the care of
the client who has become comatose
following cerebral hemorrhage is
Ineffective Airway Clearance.
42.
The initial nursing actionfor a
client who is in the clonic phase of a
tonic-clonic seizureis to obtain
equipment for orotracheal suctioning.
43.
The first nursing intervention in a
quadriplegic client who is experiencing
autonomic dysreflexia is to elevate his
head as high as possible.
44.
Following surgery for a brain tumor
near the hypothalamus, the nursing
assessment should include observing
for inability to regulate body temp.
45.
Post-myelogram (using
metrizamide (Amipaque) care includes
keeping head elevated for at least 8
hrs.
46.
Homonymous hemianopsia is
described by a client had CVA & can
only see the nasal visual field on one
side & the temporal portion on the
opposite side.
47.
Ticlopidine (Ticlid) may be
prescribed to prevent thromboembolic
CVA.
48.
To maintain airway patency during
a stroke in evolution, have orotracheal
suction available at all times.
49.
For a client w/ CVA, the gag reflex
must return before the client is fed.
50.
Clear fluids draining from the nose
of a client who had a head trauma 3
hrs ago may indicate basilar skull
fracture.
51.
An adverse effect of gingival
hyperplasia may occur during
Phenytoin (Dilantin) therapy.
52.
Urine output increased: best shows
that the mannitol is effective in a
client w/ increased ICP.
53.
A client w/ C6 spinal injury would
most likely have the symptom of
quadriplegia.
54.
Falls are the leading cause of injury
in elderly people.
55.
Primary prevention is true
prevention. Examples are
72.
To avoid shearing force injury, a
patient who is completely immobile is
lifted on a sheet.
73.
To insert a catheter from the nose
through the trachea for suction, the
nurse should ask the patient to
swallow.
74.
Vitamin C is needed for collagen
production.
75.
Only the patient can describe his
pain accurately.
76.
Cutaneous stimulation creates the
release of endorphins that block the
transmission of pain stimuli.
77.
Patient-controlled analgesia is a
safe method to relieve acute pain
caused by surgical incision, traumatic
injury, labor and delivery, or cancer.
78.
An Asian American or European
American typically places distance
between himself and others when
communicating.
79.
Active euthanasia is actively
helping a person to die.
80.
Brain death is irreversible cessation
of all brain function.
81.
Passive euthanasia is stopping the
therapy thats sustaining life.
82.
A third-party payer is an insurance
company.
83.
Utilization review is performed to
determine whether the care provided
to a patient was appropriate and costeffective.
84.
A value cohort is a group of people
who experienced an out-of-theordinary event that shaped their
values.
85.
Voluntary euthanasia is actively
helping a patient to die at the patients
request.
86.
Bananas, citrus fruits, and potatoes
are good sources of potassium.
87.
Good sources of magnesium
include fish, nuts, and grains.
88.
Beef, oysters, shrimp, scallops,
spinach, beets, and greens are good
sources of iron.
89.
Intrathecal injection is
administering a drug through the
spine.
90.
When a patient asks a question or
makes a statement thatsv emotionally
charged, the nurse should respond to
the emotion behind the statement or
question rather than to whats being
said or asked.
91.
The steps of the trajectory-nursing
model are as follows:
92.
Step 1: Identifying the trajectory
phase
93.
Step 2: Identifying the problems
and establishing goals
94.
Step 3: Establishing a plan to
meet the goals
95.
Step 4: Identifying factors that
facilitate or hinder attainment of the
goals
96.
Step 5: Implementing
interventions
97.
Step 6: Evaluating the
effectiveness of the interventions
98.
A Hindu patient is likely to request
a vegetarian diet.
99.
Pain threshold, or pain sensation, is
the initial point at which a patient feels
pain.
100.The difference between acute pain
and chronic pain is its duration.
1. Referred pain is pain thats felt at a
site other than its origin.
2. Alleviating pain by performing a back
massage is consistent with the gate
control theory.
3. Rombergs test is a test for balance or
gait.
4. Pain seems more intense at night
because the patient isnt distracted by
daily activities.
5. Older patients commonly dont report
pain because of fear of treatment,
lifestyle changes, or dependency.
6. No pork or pork products are allowed
in a Muslim diet.
7. Two goals of Healthy People 2010 are:
8. Help individuals of all ages to
increase the quality of life and the
number of years of optimal health
9. Eliminate health disparities among
different segments of the population.
10.
A community nurse is serving as a
patients advocate if she tells av
malnourished patient to go to a meal
program at a local park.
11.
If a patient isnt following his
treatment plan, the nurse should first
ask why.
12.
When a patient is ill, its essential
for the members of his family to
maintain communication about his
health needs.
13.
Ethnocentrism is the universal
belief that ones way of life is superior
to others.
14.
When a nurse is communicating
with a patient through an interpreter,
the nurse should speak to the patient
and the interpreter.
15.
In accordance with the hot-cold
system used by some Mexicans,
Puerto Ricans, and other Hispanic and
Latino groups, most foods, beverages,
herbs, and drugs are described as
cold.
16.
Prejudice is a hostile attitude
toward individuals of a particular
group.
17.
Discrimination is preferential
treatment of individuals of a particular
group. Its usually discussed in a
negative sense.
18.
Increased gastric motility interferes
with the absorption of oral drugs.
19.
The three phases of the
therapeutic relationship are
orientation, working, and termination.
20.
Patients often exhibit resistive and
challenging behaviors in the
orientation phase of the therapeutic
relationship.
21.
Abdominal assessment is
performed in the following order:
inspection, auscultation, palpation,
and percussion.
22.
When measuring blood pressure in
a neonate, the nurse should select a
cuff thats no less than one-half and no
more than two-thirds the length of the
extremity thats used.
23.
When administering a drug by Ztrack, the nurse shouldnt use the
same needle that was used to draw
the drug into the syringe because
doing so could stain the skin.
24.
Sites for intradermal injection
include the inner arm, the upper chest,
and on the back, under the scapula.
25.
When evaluating whether an
answer on an examination is correct,
the nurse should consider whether the
action thats described promotes
autonomy (independence), safety, selfesteem, and a sense of belonging.
26.
Veracity is truth and is an essential
component of a therapeutic
relationship between a health care
provider and his patient.
27.
Beneficence is the duty to do no
harm and the duty to do good. Theres
an obligation in patient care to do no
harm and an equal obligation to assist
the patient.
28.
Nonmaleficence is the duty to do
no harm.
29.
Fryes ABCDE cascade provides a
framework for prioritizing care by
identifying the most important
treatment concerns.
30.
A = Airway. This category includes
everything that affects a patent
airway, including a foreign object, fluid
from an upper respiratory infection,
and edema from trauma or an allergic
reaction.
31.
B = Breathing. This category
includes everything that affects the
breathing pattern, including
hyperventilation or hypoventilation
and abnormal breathing patterns, such
as Korsakoffs, Biots, or CheyneStokes respiration.
32.
C = Circulation. This category
includes everything that affects the
circulation, including fluid and
electrolyte disturbances and disease
processes that affect cardiac output.
33.
D = Disease processes. If the
patient has no problem with the
airway, breathing, or circulation, then
the nurse should evaluate the disease
processes, giving priority to the
disease process that poses the
greatest immediate risk. For example,
if a patient has terminal cancer and
hypoglycemia, hypoglycemia is a more
immediate concern.
34.
E = Everything else. This category
includes such issues as writing an
incident report and completing the
patient chart. When evaluating needs,
this category is never the highest
priority.
35.
Rule utilitarianism is known as the
greatest good for the greatest
number of people theory.
36.
Egalitarian theory emphasizes that
equal access to goods and services
must be provided to the less fortunate
by an affluent society.
37.
Before teaching any procedure to a
patient, the nurse must assess the
patients current knowledge and
willingness to learn.
38.
Process recording is a method of
evaluating ones communication
effectiveness.
39.
When feeding an elderly patient,
the nurse should limit highcarbohydrate foods because of the risk
of glucose intolerance.
40.
When feeding an elderly patient,
essential foods should be given first.
41.
Passive range of motion maintains
joint mobility. Resistive exercises
increase muscle mass.
42.
Isometric exercises are performed
on an extremity thats in a cast.
43.
A back rub is an example of the
gate-control theory of pain.
44.
Anything thats located below the
waist is considered unsterile; a sterile
field becomes unsterile when it comes
in contact with any unsterile item; a
sterile field must be monitored
continuously; and a border of 1 (2.5
cm) around a sterile field is considered
unsterile.
45.
A shift to the left is evident when
the number of immature cells (bands)
in the blood increases to fight an
infection.
46.
A shift to the right is evident
when the number of mature cells in
the blood increases, as seen in
advanced liver disease and pernicious
anemia.
47.
Before administering preoperative
medication, the nurse should ensure
that an informed consent form has
been signed and attached to the
patients record.
48.
A nurse should spend no more than
30 minutes per 8-hour shift providing
care to a patient who has a radiation
implant.
49.
A nurse shouldnt be assigned to
care for more than one patient who
has a radiation implant.
50.
Long-handled forceps and a leadlined container should be available in
the room of a patient who has a
radiation implant.
51.
Usually, patients who have the
same infection and are in strict
isolation can share a room.
52.
Diseases that require strict
isolation include chickenpox,
diphtheria, and viral hemorrhagic
fevers such as Marburg disease.
53.
For the patient who abides by
Jewish custom, milk and meat
shouldnt be served at the same meal.
54.
Whether the patient can perform a
procedure (psychomotor domain of
learning) is a better indicator of the
effectiveness of patient teaching than
whether the patient can simply state
the steps involved in the procedure
(cognitive domain of learning).
55.
According to Erik Erikson,
developmental stages are trust versus
mistrust (birth to 18 months),
autonomy versus shame and doubt
(18 months to age 3), initiative versus
guilt (ages 3 to 5), industry versus
inferiority (ages 5 to 12), identity
versus identity diffusion (ages 12 to
18), intimacy versus isolation (ages 18
to 25), generativity versus stagnation
(ages 25 to 60), and ego integrity
versus despair (older than age 60).
56.
When communicating with a
hearing impaired patient, the nurse
should face him.
57.
An appropriate nursing intervention
for the spouse of a patient who has a
serious incapacitating disease is to
help him to mobilize a support system.
58.
Milk is high in sodium and low in
iron.
59.
When a patient expresses concern
about a health-related issue, before
addressing the concern, the nurse
should assess the patients level of
knowledge.
60.
The most effective way to reduce a
fever is to administer an antipyretic,
which lowers the temperature set
point.