All of the following can cause tachycardia except:
- A. Fever
- B. Exercise
- C. Sympathetic nervous system stimulation
- D. Parasympathetic nervous system stimulation
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Parasympathetic stimulation slows heart rate; others increase it.
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The nurse is suctioning a client through a tracheostomy tube. During the procedure, the client begins to cough, and the nurse notes the presence of an audible wheeze. The nurse attempts to remove the suction catheter from the client's trachea but is unable to do so. What is the nurse's priority response?
- A. Call a code.
- B. Administer a bronchodilator.
- C. Contact the health care provider.
- D. Disconnect the suction source from the catheter.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: A stuck catheter with coughing and wheezing suggests obstruction or bronchospasm; disconnecting the suction source (D) is the priority to relieve pressure and attempt removal. Calling a code (A) or provider (C) delays action. Bronchodilators (B) treat wheezing but not the immediate issue. D is correct. Rationale: Disconnecting stops suction trauma, allowing catheter withdrawal and airway reassessment, a critical first step per emergency airway protocols.
Which of the following statement best describe autonomy?
- A. Doing good for the client
- B. Fairness and equality
- C. Respecting client's decision
- D. Keeping promises
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Autonomy is respecting client decisions (C), per ethics self-determination (e.g., refusing care). Doing good (A) is beneficence, fairness (B) justice, promises (D) fidelity. C best defines autonomy's focus, making it correct.
The nurse gave the wrong medication to Mr. Gary that lead to his cardiac arrest. This is an example of?
- A. Malpractice
- B. Negligence
- C. Assault
- D. Battery
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Wrong medication causing cardiac arrest is malpractice (A) breach of nursing standards, per tort law. Negligence (B) is broader, assault (C) intent-based, battery (D) touch-based. A's professional error fits, making it correct.
She dies of yellow fever in her search for truth to prove that yellow fever is carried by a mosquitoes.
- A. Clara louise Maas
- B. Pearl Tucker
- C. Isabel Hampton Robb
- D. Caroline Hampton Robb
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Clara Louise Maas died in 1901 proving yellow fever's mosquito link volunteering for bites advancing epidemiology. Unlike Tucker, Robb (educator), or Hampton Robb (surgical pioneer), her sacrifice at 25 impacted public health, a heroic legacy in nursing research and disease prevention history.
When charting in the client's record or chart, the nurse most needs to do which one of the following things?
- A. Date and sign each entry.
- B. Chart every two hours.
- C. Use ballpoint pen and not pencil.
- D. Cross out errors so others can't read them.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Dating and signing each chart entry is most essential, establishing a legal timeline and accountability for actions. Fixed intervals aren't mandatory, pens ensure permanence but aren't the priority, and crossing out errors risks misinterpretation. This practice validates care, crucial for nursing documentation integrity.