As an intraoperative nurse, you are the advocate for each of the patients who receives care in the surgical setting. How can you best exemplify the principles of patient advocacy?
- A. By encouraging the patient to perform deep breathing preoperatively
- B. By limiting the patients contact with family members preoperatively
- C. By maintaining each of your patients privacy
- D. By eliciting informed consent from patients
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Patient advocacy in the OR entails maintaining the patients physical and emotional comfort, privacy, rights, and dignity. Deep breathing is not necessary before surgery and obtaining informed consent is the purview of the physician. Family contact should not be limited.
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A 21-year-old patient is positioned on the OR bed prior to knee surgery to correct a sports-related injury. The anesthesiologist administers the appropriate anesthetic. The OR nurse should anticipate which of the following events as the teams next step in the care of this patient?
- A. Grounding
- B. Making the first incision
- C. Giving blood
- D. Intubating
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: When the patient arrives in the OR, the anesthesiologist or anesthetist reassesses the patients physical condition immediately prior to initiating anesthesia. The anesthetic is administered, and the patients airway is maintained through an intranasal intubation, oral intubation, or a laryngeal mask airway. Grounding or blood administration does not normally follow anesthetic administration immediately. An incision would not be made prior to intubation.
A 59-year-old male patient is scheduled for a hemorrhoidectomy. The OR nurse should anticipate assisting the other team members with positioning the patient in what manner?
- A. Dorsal recumbent position
- B. Trendelenburg position
- C. Sims position
- D. Lithotomy position
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The lithotomy position is used for nearly all perineal, rectal, and vaginal surgical procedures. The Sims or lateral position is used for renal surgery and the Trendelenburg position usually is used for surgery on the lower abdomen and pelvis. The usual position for surgery, called the dorsal recumbent position, is flat on the back, but this would be impracticable for rectal surgery.
The surgical patient is a 35-year-old woman who has been administered general anesthesia. The nurse recognizes that the patient is in stage II (the excitement stage) of anesthesia. Which intervention would be most appropriate for the nurse to implement during this stage?
- A. Rub the patients back.
- B. Restrain the patient.
- C. Encourage the patient to express feelings.
- D. Stroke the patients hand.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: In stage II, the patient may struggle, shout, or laugh. The movements of the patient may be uncontrolled, so it is essential the nurse help to restrain the patient for safety. None of the other listed actions protects the patients safety.
The OR nurse is participating in the appendectomy of a 20-year-old female patient who has a dangerously low body mass index. The nurse recognizes the patients consequent risk for hypothermia. What action should the nurse implement to prevent the development of hypothermia?
- A. Ensure that IV fluids are warmed to the patients body temperature.
- B. Transfuse packed red blood cells to increase oxygen carrying capacity.
- C. Place warmed bags of normal saline at strategic points around the patients body.
- D. Monitor the patients blood pressure and heart rate vigilantly.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Warmed IV fluids can prevent the development of hypothermia. Applying warmed bags of saline around the patient is not common practice. The patient is not transfused to prevent hypothermia. Blood pressure and heart rate monitoring are important, but do not relate directly to the risk for hypothermia.
An intraoperative nurse is applying interventions that will address surgical patients risks for perioperative positioning injury. Which of the following factors contribute to this increased risk for injury in the intraoperative phase of the surgical experience? Select all that apply.
- A. Absence of reflexes
- B. Diminished ability to communicate
- C. Loss of pain sensation
- D. Nausea resulting from anesthetic
- E. Reduced blood pressure
Correct Answer: A,B,C
Rationale: Loss of pain sense, reflexes, and ability to communicate subjects the intraoperative patient to possible injury. Nausea and low blood pressure are not central factors that contribute to this risk, though they are adverse outcomes.
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