Clients with chronic illness want the health care system to provide them with which of the following?
- A. Less information
- B. Less travel time
- C. Ways to adjust to disease consequences
- D. Limited information on ways to cope with their symptoms
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Chronic folks crave adaptation tools handling fear, sleep woes, or sex shifts not less info or travel ease. Nurses deliver this, a lifeline for illness' long tail, not just quick fixes.
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A patient has been assigned the nursing diagnosis of imbalanced nutrition: less than body requirements related to painful oral ulcers. Which nursing action will be most effective in improving oral intake?
- A. Offer the patient frequent small snacks between meals.
- B. Assist the patient to choose favorite foods from the menu.
- C. Provide teaching about the importance of nutritional intake.
- D. Apply prescribed anesthetic gel to oral lesions before meals.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Painful oral ulcers from cancer or chemo kill appetite anesthetic gel (e.g., lidocaine) numbs them pre-meal, making eating bearable. Snacks and favorites tempt but don't dull pain. Teaching informs, not fixes. Nurses in oncology prioritize this pain relief drives intake, tackling the root of this nutrition nosedive.
Which of the following is NOT an example of intermittent fasting?
- A. Alternate day fasting
- B. Mediterranean dieting
- C. Modified fasting regimes such as the 5:2 diet'
- D. Time restricted feeding
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Fasting flips alternate, 5:2, timed, holy skips; Mediterranean's steady, not starved. Nurses clock this chronic fast gap.
The nurse is caring for a 4-year-old child following surgical removal of a stage I neuroblastoma. Which of the following interventions will be most appropriate for this child?
- A. Applying aloe vera lotion to irradiated areas of skin
- B. Administering antiemetics as prescribed for nausea
- C. Giving medications as ordered via least invasive route
- D. Maintaining isolation as prescribed to avoid infection
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Post-surgical care for a stage I neuroblastoma (localized, surgically resected) focuses on recovery with minimal invasiveness, making giving medications via the least invasive route preferably oral most appropriate for a 4-year-old. This reduces trauma, anticipates needs like pain relief, antiemetics, or steroids (e.g., dexamethasone for swelling), and suits a stable post-op child without chemotherapy or radiation yet, as stage I often requires surgery alone. Aloe vera implies radiation, not indicated here post-surgery. Antiemetics are useful but too narrow broader medication needs apply. Isolation isn't standard for stage I post-op unless immunosuppression emerges later. This intervention balances efficacy and comfort, aligning with pediatric nursing's goal to minimize distress while ensuring effective postoperative management.
The pathophysiology of Asthma differs from COPD as:
- A. It is characterised by airflow limitation
- B. There is abnormal inflammatory response to exposure to noxious particles or gases
- C. The airflow limitation is reversible
- D. It is considered an obstructive lung disease
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Asthma's twist reversible airflow block sets it apart from COPD's fixed choke. Both obstruct, inflame to triggers, but asthma's airways bounce back with puffs. Nurses spot this, a chronic split for treatment.
A 56 year old lady with Type 2 DM and a BMI of 30 kg/m2 is reviewed by her family doctor due to poor glycaemic control. She is treated with oral gliclazide since she is diagnosed as diabetic and currently she is on 160 mg bid. Her serum creatinine is 110 μmol/L. Which ONE of the following medications should be most appropriately to be added next?
- A. Metformin
- B. Acarbose
- C. Pioglitazone
- D. Insulin
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Gliclazide maxed, HbA1c off metformin's next, safe at creatinine 110 (eGFR likely 50+), tackling insulin resistance in obesity. Acarbose slows carbs, pioglitazone risks fluid, insulin's later, linagliptin's fine but less foundational. Nurses add this chronic sugar anchor, boosting control without kidney strain.