A nurse provides care on an orthopedic reconstruction unit and is admitting two new patients, both status post knee replacement. What would be the best explanation why their care plans may be different from each other?
- A. Patients may have different insurers, or one may qualify for Medicare.
- B. Individual patients are seen as unique and dynamic, with individual needs.
- C. Nursing care may be coordinated by members of two different health disciplines.
- D. Patients are viewed as dissimilar according to their attitude toward surgery.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Regardless of the setting, each patient situation is viewed as unique and dynamic. Differences in insurance coverage and attitude may be relevant, but these should not fundamentally explain the differences in their nursing care. Nursing care should be planned by nurses, not by members of other disciplines.
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Achieving adequate pain management for a postoperative patient will require sophisticated critical thinking skills by the nurse. What are the potential benefits of critical thinking in nursing?
- A. Enhancing the nurses clinical decision making
- B. Identifying the patients individual preferences
- C. Planning the best nursing actions to assist the patient
- D. Increasing the accuracy of the nurses judgments
- E. Helping identify the patients priority needs
Correct Answer: A,C,D,E
Rationale: Independent judgments and decisions evolve from a sound knowledge base and the ability to synthesize information within the context in which it is presented. Critical thinking enhances clinical decision making, helping to identify patient needs and the best nursing actions that will assist patients in meeting those needs. Critical thinking does not normally focus on identify patient desires; these would be identified by asking the patient.
A terminally ill patient you are caring for is complaining of pain. The physician has ordered a large dose of intravenous opioids by continuous infusion. You know that one of the adverse effects of this medicine is respiratory depression. When you assess your patients respiratory status, you find that the rate has decreased from 16 breaths per minute to 10 breaths per minute. What action should you take?
- A. Decrease the rate of IV infusion.
- B. Stimulate the patient in order to increase respiratory rate.
- C. Report the decreased respiratory rate to the physician.
- D. Allow the patient to rest comfortably.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: End-of life issues that often involve ethical dilemmas include pain control, do not resuscitate orders, life-support measures, and administration of food and fluids. The risk of respiratory depression is not the intent of the action of pain control. Respiratory depression should not be used as an excuse to withhold pain medication for a terminally ill patient. The patients respiratory status should be carefully monitored and any changes should be reported to the physician.
The care team has deemed the occasional use of restraints necessary in the care of a patient with Alzheimers disease. What ethical violation is most often posed when using restraints in a long-term care setting?
- A. It limits the patients personal safety.
- B. It exacerbates the patients disease process.
- C. It threatens the patients autonomy.
- D. It is not normally legal.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Because safety risks are involved when using restraints on elderly confused patients, this is a common ethical problem, especially in long-term care settings. By definition, restraints limit the individuals autonomy. Restraints are not without risks, but they should not normally limit a patients safety. Restraints will not affect the course of the patients underlying disease process, though they may exacerbate confusion. The use of restraints is closely legislated, but they are not illegal.
A care conference has been organized for a patient with complex medical and psychosocial needs. When applying the principles of critical thinking to this patients care planning, the nurse should most exemplify what characteristic?
- A. Willingness to observe behaviors
- B. A desire to utilize the nursing scope of practice fully
- C. An ability to base decisions on what has happened in the past
- D. Openness to various viewpoints
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Willingness and openness to various viewpoints are inherent in critical thinking; these allow the nurse to reflect on the current situation. An emphasis on the past, willingness to observe behaviors, and a desire to utilize the nursing scope of practice fully are not central characteristics of critical thinkers.
The nurse caring for a patient who is two days post hip replacement notifies the physician that the patients incision is red around the edges, warm to the touch, and seeping a white liquid with a foul odor. What type of problem is the nurse dealing with?
- A. Collaborative problem
- B. Nursing problem
- C. Medical problem
- D. Administrative problem
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: In addition to nursing diagnoses and their related nursing interventions, nursing practice involves certain situations and interventions that do not fall within the definition of nursing diagnoses. These activities pertain to potential problems or complications that are medical in origin and require collaborative interventions with the physician and other members of the health care team. The other answers are incorrect because the signs and symptoms of infection are a medical complication that requires interventions by the nurse.
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