A nurse is teaching a patient about the use of albuterol (Proventil) for asthma. Which of the following instructions should be included?
- A. Use this medication daily to prevent asthma attacks.
- B. Use this medication only when you feel short of breath.
- C. Use this medication at bedtime.
- D. Use this medication before exercise.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Albuterol, a rescue inhaler, is used before exercise to prevent exercise-induced bronchospasm. It’s not for daily prevention, symptom-only use, or bedtime dosing.
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The importance of monitoring blood sugar, activity level, and insulin doses is to
adjust the activity level based on the blood sugar level.
- A. adjust the diet and insulin doses as the activity level increases or decreases.
- B. adjust the diet and activity level based on the blood sugar level.
- C. adjust the insulin doses based on the sugar level in the urine.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: If a patient injects too much insulin, exercises too much in relation to carbohydrate consumed, or does not eat enough or at the appropriate times, the blood glucose level can fall low enough to cause hypoglycemia. Adjusting diet and insulin doses based on activity level helps maintain balance.
After a painful exacerbation of rheumatoid arthritis, a patient is to begin a walking and exercise program.
An appropriate outcome would be that the patient:
- A. Avoids exercising when there is some discomfort.
- B. Is pain free while engaging in the activity program.
- C. Walks and exercise even when the pain is severe.
- D. Exercise unless the discomfort becomes too great.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Exercising until discomfort becomes too great balances activity with joint protection, promoting safe participation.
The nurse understands that the patient with esophageal varices should not be given food such as:
The nurse understands that the patient with esophageal varices should not be given food such as:
- A. Crackers
- B. Purred food
- C. Liquid
- D. Soft
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Crackers, being rough, can irritate or rupture fragile esophageal varices.
A client, age 21, is admitted with bacterial meningitis. Which hospital room would be the appropriate choice for this client?
- A. A private room down the hall from the nurses' station
- B. An isolation room close to the nurses' station
- C. A semiprivate room with a 32-year-old client who has viral meningitis
- D. A two-bed room with a client who previously had bacterial meningitis
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: A client with bacterial meningitis should be kept in isolation for at least 24 hours after admission and, during the initial acute phase, should be as close to the nurses' station as possible to allow maximal observation. Placing the client in a room with a client who has viral meningitis may cause harm to both clients because the organisms causing viral and bacterial meningitis differ; either client may contract the other's disease. Immunity to bacterial meningitis can't be acquired; therefore, a client who previously had bacterial meningitis shouldn't be put at risk by rooming with a client who has just been diagnosed with this disease.
Steam inhalation is prescribed for a client. Which of the following safety precautions should the nurse include in the client's instructions?
- A. Use distilled water in the humidifier.
- B. Keep the humidifier filled to the top with water.
- C. Turn the humidifier off when not in use.
- D. Clean the humidifier every 2 weeks.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Turning off the humidifier when not in use prevents electrical hazards and bacterial growth. Distilled water is ideal but not critical, overfilling is unnecessary, and cleaning frequency depends on use.
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