A patient on the medical unit is dying and the nurse has determined that the familys psychosocial needs during the dying process need to be addressed. What is a cause of many patient care dilemmas at the end of life?
- A. Poor communication between the family and the care team
- B. Denial of imminent death on the part of the family or the patient
- C. Limited visitation opportunities for friends and family
- D. Conflict between family members
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Many dilemmas in patient care at the end of life are related to poor communication between team members and the patient and family, as well as to failure of team members to communicate with each other effectively. Regardless of the care setting, the nurse can ensure a proactive approach to the psychosocial care of the patient and family. Denial of death may be a response to the situation, but it is not classified as a need. Visitation should accommodate wishes of the family member as long as patient care is not compromised.
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The nurse has observed that an older adult patient with a diagnosis of end-stage renal failure seems to prefer to have his eldest son make all of his health care decisions. While the family is visiting, the patient explains to you that this is a cultural practice and very important to him. How should you respond?
- A. Privately ask the son to allow the patient to make his own health care decisions.
- B. Explain to the patient that he is responsible for his own decisions.
- C. Work with the team to negotiate informed consent.
- D. Avoid divulging information to the eldest son.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: In this case of a patient who wishes to defer decisions to his son, the nurse can work with the team to negotiate informed consent, respecting the patients right not to participate in decision making and honoring his familys cultural practices.
A clinic nurse is providing patient education prior to a patients scheduled palliative radiotherapy to her spine. At the completion of the patient teaching, the patient continues to ask the same questions that the nurse has already addressed. What is the plausible conclusion that the nurse should draw from this?
- A. The patient is not listening effectively.
- B. The patient is noncompliant with the plan of care.
- C. The patient may have a low intelligence quotient or a cognitive deficit.
- D. The patient has not achieved the desired learning outcomes.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The nurse should be sensitive to patients ongoing needs and may need to repeat previously provided information or simply be present while the patient and family react emotionally. Telling a patient something is not teaching. If a patient continues to ask the same questions, teaching needs to be reinforced. The patients response is not necessarily suggestive of noncompliance, cognitive deficits, or not listening.
As the American population ages, nurses expect see more patients admitted to long-term care facilities in need of palliative care. Regulations now in place that govern how the care in these facilities is both organized and reimbursed emphasize what aspect of care?
- A. Ongoing acute care
- B. Restorative measures
- C. Mobility and socialization
- D. Incentives to palliative care
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Regulations that govern how care in these facilities is organized and reimbursed tend to emphasize restorative measures and serve as a disincentive to palliative care. Long-term care facilities do not normally provide acute care for their patients. Regulations for long-term care facilities do not primarily emphasize mobility and socialization.
A patients daughter has asked the nurse about helping him end his terrible suffering. The nurse is aware of the ANA Position Statement on Assisted Suicide, which clearly states that nursing participation in assisted suicide is a violation of the Code for Nurses. What does the Position Statement further stress?
- A. Educating families about the moral implications of assisted suicide
- B. Identifying patient and family concerns and fears
- C. Identifying resources that meet the patients desire to die
- D. Supporting effective means to honor the patients desire to die
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The ANA Position Statement further stresses the important role of the nurse in supporting effective symptom management, contributing to the creation of environments for care that honor the patients and familys wishes, as well as identifying their concerns and fears. Discussion of moral implications would normally be beyond the purview of the nurse.
In the past three to four decades, nursing has moved into the forefront in providing care for the dying. Which phenomenon has most contributed to this increased focus of care of the dying?
- A. Increased incidence of infections and acute illnesses
- B. Increased focus of health care providers on disease prevention
- C. Larger numbers of people dying in hospital settings
- D. Demographic changes in the population
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The focus on care of the dying has been motivated by the aging of the population, the prevalence of, and publicity surrounding, life-threatening illnesses (e.g., cancer and AIDS), and the increasing likelihood of a prolonged period of chronic illness prior to death. The salience of acute infections, prevention measures, and death in hospital settings are not noted to have had a major influence on this phenomenon.
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