The genetic profile determines the prevalence of diabetic nephropathy in a population group. Question: Which population group has the LOWEST risk to develop endstage renal disease as a consequence of diabetes?
- A. Afro-Americans
- B. Iberians (Spanish origin)
- C. Caucasians
- D. Native Americans
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Caucasians dodge worst kidney doom Afro-Americans, Native Americans soar high, Iberians mid-tier. Genes and diabetes hit lighter here, a chronic renal risk low nurses screen this gradient.
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According to Johnson and Chang (2014), compared to the non-indigenous population, the Australian indigenous population is more likely to:
- A. Live in the bush, eat native food and have increased exposure to the elements
- B. Have a higher incidence of chronic disease, be less healthy, die at a much younger age, and have lower quality of life
- C. Access health care and implement appropriate lifestyle changes equitably
- D. Experience death at a rate of twice that of the non-indigenous population
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Indigenous Australians face a heavier chronic disease load diabetes, heart issues dying younger, with life expectancy gaps of 10+ years, and poorer quality of life from systemic inequities. Bush living's a stereotype, not a health driver; equitable care's a myth access lags; death rate's high but not precisely double. Nurses see this burden, tackling social determinants, a stark chronic care reality rooted in data, not just location or access claims.
A 16-year-old female patient experiences alopecia resulting from chemotherapy, prompting the nursing diagnoses of disturbed body image and situational low self-esteem. What action by the patient would best indicate that she is meeting the goal of improved body image and self-esteem?
- A. The patient requests that her family bring her makeup and wig
- B. The patient begins to discuss the future with her family
- C. The patient reports less disruption from pain and discomfort
- D. The patient cries openly when discussing her disease
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Alopecia guts self-image, especially at 16 requesting makeup and a wig shows she's fighting back, reclaiming her look and confidence. It's active, not passive, unlike future talks (hopeful but vague), less pain (physical, not emotional), or crying (raw but not progress). Nurses in oncology cheer this, knowing it signals resilience against chemo's brutal psychosocial hit, a win for body image goals.
Which of the following is FALSE regarding patient education for insulin therapy?
- A. It improves the patients experience and adherence to insulin therapy
- B. It requires time and preparation
- C. It can only be done by diabetes nurse educators
- D. Different topics and focus can be covered at different stages of insulin therapy
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Insulin education boosts adherence and takes prep varied topics hit stages, and checking understanding's key. But pinning it to diabetes nurse educators alone flops; GPs, pharmacists, even peers can teach, widening reach. Team effort trumps solo specialty, ensuring chronic care's flexible, not bottlenecked, a practical truth in diabetes' long haul.
The nurse is providing preoperative care for a 7-year-old patient with a brain tumor. Which of the following is the priority intervention?
- A. Assessing the child's level of consciousness
- B. Providing a tour of the intensive care unit for the child and parents
- C. Educating the child and parents about shunts
- D. Having the child talk to another child who has had this surgery
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: For a child with a brain tumor preoperatively, assessing level of consciousness (LOC) is the priority, as it monitors for increased intracranial pressure (ICP) from tumor mass effect vital signs like alertness or confusion shift rapidly and signal deterioration needing immediate action. No baseline data exists here, making LOC the first step in the nursing process to guide care. An ICU tour reduces anxiety but delays critical assessment. Shunt education applies post-diagnosis of hydrocephalus, not universally pre-op, and lacks urgency without LOC context. Peer support is psychosocial, not physiological, and secondary. LOC assessment aligns with ABCs (circulation includes cerebral perfusion), ensuring the nurse detects neurological decline early, a cornerstone of pediatric neuro-oncology care before surgery.
Following chemotherapy, a patient is being closely monitored for tumor lysis syndrome. Which laboratory value requires particular attention?
- A. Platelet count
- B. Electrolytes
- C. Hemoglobin
- D. Hematocrit
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Tumor lysis syndrome, a post-chemotherapy emergency, floods blood with cell breakdown products potassium, phosphate, uric acid disrupting electrolytes, risking renal failure or cardiac arrest. Monitoring electrolytes is critical to catch hyperkalemia or hyperphosphatemia, guiding urgent correction like dialysis. Platelets drop with chemotherapy but aren't TLS-specific. Hemoglobin and hematocrit track anemia, not lysis effects. Electrolytes' volatility in TLS demands focus abnormalities signal escalating danger, a nurse's lifeline to intervene, ensuring rapid response to this metabolic storm in cancer treatment's wake.