A client diagnosed with cardiomyopathy stops eating, takes long naps, and turns away from the nurse when the nurse talks to the client. The nurse should make which interpretation about this behavior?
- A. The client is depressed.
- B. The client is noncompliant.
- C. The client has intractable pain.
- D. The client is unable to tolerate activity.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Depression is a common problem related to clients who have long-term and debilitating illnesses. None of the remaining options are related to the symptoms present in the question and therefore are not appropriate interpretations.
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A client reports having difficulty concentrating and outbursts of anger, as well as feeling 'keyed up' all the time. The client reveals that the behaviors began soon after witnessing the murder of a good friend. The nurse should suspect which stressor before communicating with the client?
- A. Social phobia
- B. Panic disorder
- C. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
- D. Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: PTSD is a response to an event that would be markedly distressing to almost anyone. Characteristic symptoms include a sustained level of anxiety, difficulty sleeping, irritability, difficulty concentrating, and outbursts of anger. Panic disorders and social phobia are characterized by a specific fear of an object or situation. OCD involves some repetitive thoughts or behaviors.
A newborn male infant is diagnosed with an undescended testicle (cryptorchidism), and these findings are shared with the parents. The parents ask questions about the condition. The nurse should respond to the parents that which condition can occur and have a psychosocial impact if the undescended testicle is not corrected?
- A. Atrophy
- B. Infertility
- C. Malignancy
- D. Feminization
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Infertility can occur in males with this condition because proper function of the testes in producing fertile sperm depends on a temperature of less than 98.6°F (37.0°C). The psychological effects of an 'empty scrotum' could affect the client's perception of self and the ability to reproduce. Options 1 and 3 are possible physical consequences of a failure to treat cryptorchidism rather than psychosocial consequences. Because all of the hormones that are responsible for secondary sex characteristics continue to be secreted directly into the bloodstream, option 4 is not correct.
A client has just given birth to a newborn who has a cleft lip and palate. When planning to talk with the client, the nurse recognizes that the client needs to first work through which emotion before maternal bonding can occur?
- A. Guilt
- B. Grief
- C. Anger
- D. Depression
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The nurse should recognize that a mother will go through the grief process after giving birth to a child with a birth defect. After the grief process, the mother can begin to focus on bonding with the infant. The remaining options are incorrect because they are each only one component of the grief process.
A teenager diagnosed with celiac disease arrives at the emergency department reporting profuse, watery diarrhea after a pizza party the night before. The client states, 'I don't want to be different from my friends.' Which acute client concern should the nurse focus on when responding to the client?
- A. Diarrhea
- B. Low self-esteem
- C. Deficient fluid volume
- D. Increased inflammation
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The client expresses concern about being different from friends. Celiac crisis is a medical diagnosis that often involves diarrhea. Although the question states that the client has profuse, watery diarrhea, no data identify an actual deficient fluid volume or increased inflammation.
A client diagnosed with a severe ulcer of the right foot is told that a right leg amputation may be necessary. Which signs or client behaviors indicative of anticipatory grief should the nurse monitor the client for?
- A. Stating a fear of the future and unknown
- B. Engaging in periods of weeping or raging
- C. Expressing anger at the medical professionals
- D. Expressing a feeling of unreality and disbelief
- E. Expressing a desire to run away from the situation
- F. Stating that he knows all he needs to know about his condition
Correct Answer: A,B,C,D,E
Rationale: Anticipatory grief refers to the intellectual and emotional responses and behaviors by which individuals, families, or communities work through the process of modifying self-concept based on the perception of potential loss. Signs of anticipatory grief include fears of the future and the unknown, periods of weeping or raging, anger at medical professionals, a feeling of unreality and disbelief, a desire to run away from the situation, feelings of emptiness or of being lost, a sense of being numb and fatigued, a need to oversee every detail of care, pronounced clinging to or dependency on other family members, and fear of going crazy. A statement by the client that he knows all he needs to know about his condition is not a sign of anticipatory grieving; it may indicate another client problem such as avoidance or fear.
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