A nurse is planning a diet for a client who is iron deficient. Which of the following foods high in iron should the nurse include in the plan?
- A. Yogurt
- B. Leafy green vegetables
- C. Oranges
- D. Cashews
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Iron deficiency craves heme leafy greens like spinach pack non-heme iron, boosting hemoglobin, a diet fix over dairy's low yield. Oranges aid absorption, not iron itself; cashews offer some, less potently. Nurses plan greens, pairing with vitamin C, a practical lift for this anemic client's blood.
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All of the following are broad categories of dietary approaches EXCEPT:
- A. Energy-focused
- B. Macronutrient-focused
- C. Reward-focused
- D. Dietary timing-focused
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Diets calories, macros, patterns, timing rule; reward's brain, not plate. Nurses map this chronic food frame, skipping psyche.
Tetanus:
- A. typically has an incubation period of 23 days
- B. immunization status is particularly poor in elderly women
- C. toxoid is more effective by S.C. injection
- D. IgG will provide passive protection for about a week
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Tetanus 7-10 days incubate, elderly women lag shots, IM toxoid, Ig lasts longer, pregnancy's fine. Nurses tag this chronic gap.
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.
Which of the following is NOT an example of intermittent fasting?
- A. Alternate day fasting
- B. Very low calorie diet
- C. Time restricted feeding
- D. Religious fasting
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Intermittent fasting flips eating windows alternate days, time limits, 5:2, and religious fasts fit, cycling feast and famine. Very low calorie diets slash intake daily, not intermittently, a steady cut, not a fast. Clinicians spot this outlier, shaping obesity's chronic rhythm, a key distinction in diet's dance.
Which of the following is FALSE about reduced ejection fraction heart failure (HFrEF)?
- A. The goals of therapy are to reduce morbidity (i.e., reducing symptoms, improving health-related quality of life and functional status, decreasing the rate of hospitalisation) and to reduce mortality
- B. Beta blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, angiotensin II receptor blocker (ARB), or angiotensin receptor-neprilysin inhibitor (ARNI) and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (MRA) are the preferred antihypertensive agents because these agents improve survival
- C. Recommended lifestyle modifications include smoking cessation, restriction of alcohol consumption, salt restriction, weight reduction in obese patients, as well as daily weight monitoring to detect fluid accumulation before it becomes symptomatic
- D. Patients at high risk for re-hospitalisation should be referred to a long-term care facility
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: HFrEF goals, preferred drugs (beta blockers, ACEi, ARBs, ARNI, MRA), and lifestyle changes are true, per ESC/ACC guidelines. However, high re-hospitalization risk doesn't mandate long-term care referral outpatient management or cardiac rehab is preferred unless dependency justifies it. This false claim refines chronic HFrEF management focus.