An elderly patient, while being seen in an urgent care facility for a possible respiratory infection, asks the nurse if Medicare is going to cover the cost of the visit. What information can the nurse give the patient to help allay her concerns?
- A. Medicare has a copayment for many of the services it covers. This requires the patient to pay a part of the bill.
- B. Medicare pays for 100% of the cost for acute-care services, so the cost of the visit will be covered.
- C. Medicare will only pay the cost for acute-care services if the patient has a very low income.
- D. Medicare will not pay for the cost of acute-care services so the patient will be billed for the services provided.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The two major programs that finance health in the United States are Medicare and Medicaid, both of which are overseen by the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS). Both programs cover acute-care needs such as inpatient hospitalization, physician care, outpatient care, home health services, and skilled nursing care in a nursing. Medicare is a plan specifically for the elderly population, and Medicaid is a program that provides services based on income.
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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.
After a sudden decline in cognition, a 77-year-old man who has been diagnosed with vascular dementia is receiving care in his home. To reduce this mans risk of future infarcts, what action should the nurse most strongly encourage?
- A. Activity limitation and falls reduction efforts
- B. Adequate nutrition and fluid intake
- C. Rigorous control of the patients blood pressure and serum lipid levels
- D. Use of mobility aids to promote independence
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Because vascular dementia is associated with hypertension and cardiovascular disease, risk factors (e.g., hypercholesterolemia, history of smoking, diabetes) are similar. Prevention and management are also similar. Therefore, measures to decrease blood pressure and lower cholesterol levels may prevent future infarcts. Activity limitation is unnecessary and infarcts are not prevented by nutrition or the use of mobility aids.
You are the nurse caring for an elderly patient with cardiovascular disease. The patient comes to the clinic with a suspected respiratory infection and is diagnosed with pneumonia. As the nurse, what do you know about the altered responses of older adults?
- A. Treatments for older adults need to be more holistic than treatments used in the younger population.
- B. The altered responses of older adults reinforce the need for the nurse to monitor all body systems to identify possible systemic complications.
- C. The altered responses of older adults define the nursing interactions with the patient.
- D. Older adults become hypersensitive to antibiotic treatments for infectious disease states.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Older people may be unable to respond effectively to an acute illness, or, if a chronic health condition is present, they may be unable to sustain appropriate responses over a long period. Furthermore, their ability to respond to definitive treatment is impaired. The altered responses of older adults reinforce the need for nurses to monitor all body system functions closely, being alert to signs of impending systemic complication. Holism should be integrated into all patients care. Altered responses in the older adult do not define the interactions between the nurse and the patient. Older adults do not become hypersensitive to antibiotic treatments for infectious disease states.
A gerontologic nurse practitioner provides primary care for a large number of older adults who are living with various forms of cardiovascular disease. This nurse is well aware that heart disease is the leading cause of death in the aged. What is an age-related physiological change that contributes to this trend?
- A. Heart muscle and arteries lose their elasticity.
- B. Systolic blood pressure decreases.
- C. Resting heart rate decreases with age.
- D. Atrial-septal defects develop with age.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The leading cause of death for patients over the age of 65 years is cardiovascular disease. With age, heart muscle and arteries lose their elasticity, resulting in a reduced stroke volume. As a person ages, systolic blood pressure does not decrease, resting heart rate does not decrease, and the aged are not less likely to adopt a healthy lifestyle.
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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