The charge nurse determines that the new nurse understands the concepts associated with suicide and suicide intentions when the new nurse makes which statement?
- A. Only the psychotic individual commits suicide.
- B. Suicidal attempts are attention-seeking behaviors.
- C. Suicide runs in the family, so there is nothing that health care personnel can do about it.
- D. Many individuals who commit suicide have talked about their suicidal intentions to others.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Most people who do commit suicide have given definite clues or warnings about their intentions. The individual who is suicidal is not necessarily psychotic. A suicide attempt is not an attention-seeking behavior, and each act should be taken very seriously. Suicide is not an inherited condition. The remaining options are considered myths regarding suicide.
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When a client of Mexican American descent tells the nurse that she treated her infection by drinking milk, the nurse interprets the client's remark as:
- A. Confusion from fever
- B. Use of the first disease concept
- C. Use of milk as a laxative
- D. The need for a dietitian to assist her with meal planning
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: In Mexican American culture, milk may be used as a traditional remedy for certain conditions, reflecting the ‘hot-cold' disease concept. It's not necessarily confusion, a laxative, or a dietary issue.
A client at 12 weeks' gestation tells the nurse that she is a vegetarian and eats 'lots of rice.' To help meet the client's need for protein during pregnancy, the nurse suggests that the client combine the rice with which of the following?
- A. Beans.
- B. Soy milk.
- C. Yogurt.
- D. Corn.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Combining rice with beans provides a complete protein, meeting the increased protein needs during pregnancy.
Select the basic sterile asepsis procedures that are accurate. Select all that apply:
- A. Sterile items ONLY are placed on the sterile field.
- B. The nurse must keep the sterile field below waist level.
- C. Coughing or sneezing over the sterile field contaminates the sterile field.
- D. The nurse must maintain a 1/2 inch border around the sterile field that is not sterile.
- E. Moisture and wetness contaminate the sterile field.
- F. Sterile masks are used by staff and the client when a sterile field is being set up and/or maintained
Correct Answer: A,C,E
Rationale: Sterile items only on the sterile field , coughing/sneezing contaminating the field , and moisture contaminating the field are accurate sterile asepsis principles. The sterile field must be above waist level (B is incorrect), a 1-inch border is standard (D is incorrect), and masks are not required for clients (F is incorrect).
A hospice nurse is caring for a client with breast cancer and brain metastasis. The nurse is reviewing the lab report below. According to the information in the chart, what should the nurse do next?
- A. Document these results on the medical record.
- B. Report the elevated potassium level immediately.
- C. Report the elevated calcium level immediately.
- D. Refrain from reporting the results because the client is in hospice care.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The normal calcium level is 9.0 to 10.5 mg/dL. Hypercalcemia is commonly seen with malignant disease and metastases. The other laboratory values are normal. Hypercalcemia can be treated with fluids, furosemide (Lasix), or administration of calcitonin. Failure to treat hypercalcemia can cause muscle weakness, changes in level of consciousness, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and dehydration. Although the client is on hospice care, she will still need palliative treatment. Comfort and risk reduction are components of hospice care.
Which of the following actions by the nurse will most likely ensure that the correct client receives a medication? Select all that apply.
- A. Have the client state his or her name.
- B. Check the name on the arm band with the name on the medication.
- C. Learn to recognize the client.
- D. Check the client's room number.
- E. Compare the date of birth on the client's chart to the date of birth on the client's armband.
Correct Answer: A,B,E
Rationale: Using two identifiers, such as the client's name, armband, and date of birth, ensures accurate medication administration. Room number and visual recognition are not reliable.
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