A client comes to the clinic with a bloody nose. Which instruction is most appropriate?
- A. Sit up with your head tilted forward. Grasp the soft part of your nose firmly between your thumb and forefinger.'
- B. Lay down and tilt your head backward. Grasp the end of your nose between your fingers.'
- C. Sit up and lean backwards. Put pressure on the side of your nose with your hand.'
- D. Lie down with your head lower than your feet. Grasp as much of your nose as possible between your fingers.'
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Sitting with the head tilted forward and grasping the soft part of the nose prevents aspiration of blood and effectively stops bleeding.
You may also like to solve these questions
Which nursing interventions should the nurse implement for the client diagnosed with a pulmonary embolus who is undergoing thrombolytic therapy? Select all that apply.
- A. Keep protamine sulfate readily available.
- B. Avoid applying pressure to venipuncture sites.
- C. Assess for overt and covert signs of bleeding.
- D. Avoid invasive procedures and injections.
- E. Administer stool softeners as ordered.
Correct Answer: B,C,D
Rationale: Avoiding pressure (B), monitoring bleeding (C), and avoiding procedures (D) prevent hemorrhage during thrombolytics. Protamine (A) reverses heparin, and softeners (E) are unrelated.
While the nurse is suctioning a tracheostomy tube, the client starts to cough. What is the best action for the nurse to take?
- A. Suction deeper to pick up secretions
- B. Gently withdraw suction tubing to allow suction or coughing out of mucus
- C. Remove the suction as quickly as possible
- D. Put the suction tube in and out several times to pick up secretions
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Removing the suction quickly allows the client to cough out mucus naturally, preventing irritation or trauma.
You are assessing your newly admitted patients who are all presenting with atypical signs and symptoms of a possible lung infection. The physician suspects tuberculosis. So, therefore, the patients are being monitored and tested for the disease. Select all the risk factors below that increases a patient's risk for developing tuberculosis:
- A. Diabetes
- B. Liver failure
- C. Long-term care resident
- D. Inmate
- E. IV drug user
- F. HIV
- G. U.S. resident
Correct Answer: C,D,E,F
Rationale: Remember from our lecture we discussed the risk factors for developing TB and to remember them I said remember the mnemonic "TB Risk". It stands for tight living quarters (LTC resident, prison, homeless shelter etc.), below or at the poverty line (homeless), refugee (especially in high risk countries), immune system issue such as HIV, substance abusers (IV drugs or alcohol), Kids less than the age of 5....all these are risk factors.
The nurse is preparing to administer warfarin (Coumadin), an oral anticoagulant, to a client diagnosed with a pulmonary embolus. Which data would cause the nurse to question administering the medication?
- A. The client's partial thromboplastin time (PTT) is 38.
- B. The client's international normalized ratio (INR) is 5.
- C. The client's prothrombin time (PT) is 22.
- D. The client's erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) is 10.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: An INR of 5 (B) is above the therapeutic range (2–3 for pulmonary embolus), indicating excessive anticoagulation and bleeding risk, so warfarin should be questioned. PTT (A) is for heparin, not warfarin. PT (C) alone is not standardized. ESR (D) is irrelevant to anticoagulation.
Select all the medications used to treat pneumonia that are narrowspectrum?
- A. Macrolides
- B. Tamiflu
- C. Fluroquinolones
- D. Penicillins
Correct Answer: A,D
Rationale: Narrow-spectrum antibiotics target specific bacteria. Macrolides and Penicillins are narrow-spectrum, effective against gram-positive bacteria common in pneumonia. Tamiflu is antiviral, and Fluoroquinolones are broad-spectrum.