The male client diagnosed with chronic pain since a construction accident which broke several vertebrae tells the nurse he has been referred to a pain clinic and asks, 'What good will it do? I will never be free of this pain.' Which statement is the nurse's best response?
- A. Are you afraid of the pain never going away?
- B. The pain clinic will give you medication to cure the pain.
- C. Pain clinics work to help you achieve relief from pain.
- D. I am not sure. You should discuss this with your HCP.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Pain clinics offer multimodal relief (e.g., therapy, medications), addressing chronic pain holistically. Fear exploration, cure promises, or deferring to HCP is less supportive.
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The client has been declared brain dead and is an organ donor. The nurse is preparing the wife of the client to enter the room to say good-bye. Which information is most important for the nurse to discuss with the wife?
- A. Inform the wife the client will still be on the ventilator.
- B. Instruct the wife to only stay a few minutes at the bedside.
- C. Tell the wife it is all right to talk to the client.
- D. Allow another family member to go in with the wife.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Informing the wife about the ventilator prepares her for the client’s appearance, reducing distress, a priority for organ donors. Time limits, talking, or companions are secondary.
The female client in the oncology clinic tells the nurse she has a great deal of pain but does not like to take pain medication. Which action should the nurse implement first?
- A. Tell the client it is important for her to take her medication.
- B. Find out how the client has been dealing with the pain.
- C. Have the HCP tell the client to take the pain medications.
- D. Instruct the client not to worry-the pain will resolve itself.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Assessing coping strategies informs a tailored pain management plan, respecting client preferences. Forcing medication, HCP involvement, or dismissing pain is premature.
The primary nurse caring for the client who died is crying with the family at the bedside. Which action should the charge nurse implement?
- A. Request the primary nurse to come out in the hall.
- B. Refer the nurse to the employee assistance program.
- C. Allow the nurse and family this time to grieve.
- D. Ask the chaplain to relieve the nurse at the bedside.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Allowing the nurse to grieve with the family supports emotional bonding, unless it impairs care. Removing, referring, or replacing the nurse may disrupt this moment.
The client who is terminally ill called the significant others to the room and said goodbye, then dismissed them and now lies quietly and refuses to eat. The nurse understands the client is in what stage of the grieving process?
- A. Denial.
- B. Anger.
- C. Bargaining.
- D. Acceptance.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Saying goodbye and withdrawing quietly reflect acceptance in Kübler-Ross’s grief stages, common in terminal illness.
Which tissue or organ can be repeatedly donated to clients needing a transplant?
- A. Skin.
- B. Bones.
- C. Kidneys.
- D. Bone marrow.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Bone marrow regenerates, allowing repeated donation. Skin, bones, and kidneys are limited or single-donation tissues/organs.