For safety, the nurse should ask the client to:
- A. drink 1000 cc prior to the procedure to affect fluid loss.
- B. eat foods low in fat.
- C. empty his bladder prior to the procedure.
- D. assume the prone position.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: When performing a paracentesis, the client must be sitting up to allow the fluid to settle to the lower abdomen. To prevent trauma to the bladder while inserting a needle to aspirate the fluid, the bladder must be empty.
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People who live in poverty are most likely to obtain health care from:
- A. their primary care physician (family doctor)
- B. a neighborhood clinic
- C. specialists
- D. Emergency Departments or urgent care centers
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Economic barriers often lead those in poverty to seek care from Emergency Departments or urgent care centers, which are more accessible than primary care or specialists.
Which of the following individuals may legally give informed consent?
- A. an 86-year-old male with advanced Alzheimer's disease
- B. a 14-year-old girl needing an appendectomy who is not an emancipated minor
- C. a 72-year-old female scheduled for a heart transplant
- D. a 6-month-old baby needing bowel surgery
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Only competent adults can legally give informed consent. The 72-year-old female is presumed competent unless stated otherwise. An individual with advanced Alzheimer's lacks decision-making capacity, a non-emancipated minor cannot consent, and infants are legally incapable of consenting; their guardians must provide consent.
The nurse is observing the nursing student caring for the client with an artificial eye. What action by the student nurse would require intervention?
- A. Positioning the client lying down to remove the prosthetic eye
- B. Drying the prosthetic eye with gauze before reinsertion
- C. Cleansing the prosthetic eye with normal saline solution
- D. Telling the client to remove the prosthetic eye weekly for cleaning
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: B: The prosthetic eye should be moist to facilitate insertion; drying it could cause trauma to the socket. A: Lying down aids safe removal. C: Normal saline is appropriate for cleansing. D: Periodic removal every 1-3 weeks is recommended.
A client's postoperative pain seems to be getting worse instead of better. When the nurse asks the client, 'Why do you think it's getting worse?' the client replies, 'My wife died last month. It's all I can think about.' The nurse must now consider:
- A. calling the physician for an increased dosage of pain medication
- B. calling the physician for a sedative
- C. referring the client for a psychiatric consult
- D. developing interventions for grief and loss
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The client's grief over his wife's death is likely exacerbating his pain perception, requiring grief and loss interventions to address the affective component.
Nail and foot care are essential in meeting basic hygiene needs of clients. Important assessments by the nurse in this area include:
- A. all body assessment, including the feet and nails.
- B. the essential lab work of the client.
- C. the nail beds and the tissue surrounding the nails.
- D. foot corns and calluses only.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The nail beds and the tissue surrounding the nails should be assessed for abnormal discoloration, lesions, paronychia (infection of tissue surrounding the nail), tissue dryness, breaks in the skin, pressure areas, or other abnormal appearances.