An 83-year-old woman was diagnosed with Alzheimers disease 2 years ago and the disease has progressed at an increasing pace in recent months. The patient has lost 16 pounds over the past 3 months, leading to a nursing diagnosis of Imbalanced Nutrition: Less than Body Requirements. What intervention should the nurse include in this patients plan of care?
- A. Offer the patient rewards for finishing all the food on her tray.
- B. Offer the patient bland, low-salt foods to limit offensiveness.
- C. Offer the patient only one food item at a time to promote focused eating.
- D. Arrange for insertion of a gastrostomy tube and initiate enteral feeding.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: To avoid any playing with food, one dish should be offered at a time. Foods should be familiar and appealing, not bland. Tube feeding is not likely necessary at this time and a reward system is unlikely to be beneficial.
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The presence of a gerontologic advanced practice nurse in a long-term care facility has proved beneficial to both the patients and the larger community in which they live. Nurses in this advanced practice role have been shown to cause what outcome?
- A. Greater interaction between younger adults and older adults occurs.
- B. The elderly recover more quickly from acute illnesses.
- C. Less deterioration takes place in the overall health of patients.
- D. The elderly are happier in long-term care facilities than at home.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The use of advanced practice nurses who have been educated in geriatric nursing concepts has proved to be very effective when dealing with the complex care needs of an older patient. When best practices are used and current scientific knowledge applied to clinical problems, significantly less deterioration occurs in the overall health of aging patients. This does not necessarily mean that patients are happier in long-term care than at home, that they recover more quickly from acute illnesses, or greater interaction occurs between younger and older adults.
A gerontologic nurse is making an effort to address some of the misconceptions about older adults that exist among health care providers. The nurse has made the point that most people aged 75 years remains functionally independent. The nurse should attribute this trend to what factor?
- A. Early detection of disease and increased advocacy by older adults
- B. Application of health-promotion and disease-prevention activities
- C. Changes in the medical treatment of hypertension and hyperlipidemia
- D. Genetic changes that have resulted in increased resiliency to acute infection
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Even among people 75 years of age and over, most remain functionally independent, and the proportion of older Americans with limitations in activities is declining. These declines in limitations reflect recent trends in health-promotion and disease-prevention activities, such as improved nutrition, decreased smoking, increased exercise, and early detection and treatment of risk factors such as hypertension and elevated serum cholesterol levels. This phenomenon is not attributed to genetics, medical treatment, or increased advocacy.
You are the nurse caring for patients in the urology clinic. A new patient, 78 years old, presents with complaints of urinary incontinence. An anticholinergic is prescribed. Why might this type of medication be an inappropriate choice in the elderly population?
- A. Gastrointestinal hypermotility can be an adverse effect of this medication.
- B. Detrusor instability can be an adverse effect of this medication.
- C. Confusion can be an adverse effect of this medication.
- D. Increased symptoms of urge incontinence can be an adverse effect of this medication.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Although medications such as anticholinergics may decrease some of the symptoms of urge incontinence (detrusor instability), the adverse effects of these medications (dry mouth, slowed gastrointestinal motility, and confusion) may make them inappropriate choices for the elderly.
A nurse is caring for an 86-year-old female patient who has become increasingly frail and unsteady on her feet. During the assessment, the patient indicates that she has fallen three times in the month, though she has not yet suffered an injury. The nurse should take action in the knowledge that this patient is at a high risk for what health problem?
- A. A hip fracture
- B. A femoral fracture
- C. Pelvic dysplasia
- D. Tearing of a meniscus or bursa
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The most common fracture resulting from a fall is a fractured hip resulting from osteoporosis and the condition or situation that produced the fall. The other listed injuries are possible, but less likely than a hip fracture.
Nurses and members of other health disciplines at a states public health division are planning programs for the next 5 years. The group has made the decision to focus on diseases that are experiencing the sharpest increases in their contributions to the overall death rate in the state. This team should plan health promotion and disease prevention activities to address what health problem?
- A. Stroke
- B. Cancer
- C. Respiratory infections
- D. Alzheimers disease
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: In the past 60 years, overall deaths, and specifically, deaths from heart disease, have declined. Recently, deaths from cancer and cerebrovascular disease have declined. However, deaths from Alzheimers disease have risen more than 50% between 1999 and 2007.
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