The hospice nurse has just admitted a new patient to the program. What principle guides hospice care?
- A. Care addresses the needs of the patient as well as the needs of the family
- B. Care is focused on the patient centrally and the family peripherally
- C. The focus of all aspects of care is solely on the patient
- D. The care team prioritizes the patient's physical needs and the family is responsible for the patient's emotional needs
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Hospice wraps the patient and family in care physical, emotional, spiritual for both, not just one. It's not patient-only or peripheral family focus; it's a unit. Splitting physical and emotional duties misses the holistic vibe. Nurses in oncology's endgame lean on this, ensuring comfort and support ripple out, easing the load for all as death nears.
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The nurse supervises the care of a patient with a temporary radioactive cervical implant. Which action by unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP), if observed by the nurse, would require an intervention?
- A. The UAP flushes the toilet once after emptying the patient's bedpan.
- B. The UAP stands by the patient's bed for 30 minutes talking with the patient.
- C. The UAP places the patient's bedding in the laundry container in the hallway.
- D. The UAP gives the patient an alcohol-containing mouthwash to use for oral care.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Cervical implant's radioactive 30 minutes bedside overshoots exposure limits (under 30's safe); flushing , laundry , and mouthwash don't radiate. Nurses in oncology intervene UAP need time caps to dodge radiation, a safety must.
Which statement is not true?
- A. negative thick and thin smears does not adequately rule out malaria
- B. falciparum malaria will always show up on thick and thin smears where the others may not
- C. chloroquine is the drug of choice to treat falciparum
- D. vivax and ovale are more likely to reactivate at a later stage
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Chloroquine flops for falciparum resistance rules, not smears' miss, relapse, or anemia truths. Nurses dodge this chronic treatment trap.
Which of these causes of gastroenteritis usually requires treatment with antibiotics?
- A. shigella
- B. salmonella
- C. e-coli
- D. giardia
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Giardia flagellate needs metronidazole, not shigella, salmonella, E. coli, campy's self-run. Nurses dose this chronic gut bug.
A client is receiving interleukins along with chemotherapy. What assessment by the nurse takes priority?
- A. Blood pressure
- B. Lung assessment
- C. Oral mucous membranes
- D. Skin integrity
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Interleukins, a type of biologic response modifier used with chemotherapy, can cause capillary leak syndrome, where fluid shifts from blood vessels into tissues, leading to hypotension and edema. This makes blood pressure the priority assessment, as a drop could indicate intravascular depletion, risking shock or organ failure if undetected. Lung assessment is relevant for potential pulmonary edema, but hypotension precedes respiratory distress in this context. Oral mucous membranes and skin integrity matter for chemotherapy's broader effects (e.g., mucositis, rashes), but these are less urgent than hemodynamic stability. Monitoring blood pressure first ensures early detection of a life-threatening complication, aligning with nursing's focus on airway, breathing, and circulation principles, critical in managing interleukin therapy's systemic impact.
In the year 2012, appropriate statements regarding complications of percutaneous cervical cordotomy in the UK include:
- A. Estimates of complication rates are based on pooled data in a national registry.
- B. Complications are similar to those after open surgical cordotomy.
- C. Rates of major complications such as death and paralysis are between 1 in 10000 and 1 in 1000.
- D. Persistent postural hypotension is uncommon.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: In 2012, UK percutaneous cervical cordotomy (PCC) complication data were limited, not pooled nationally case series or institutional reports dominated. PCC's minimally invasive nature yields fewer complications (e.g., no wound infections) than open cordotomy's extensive approach. Major complications like death or paralysis are rare (<1%), below 1-in-1000 estimates, due to precise imaging and technique. Persistent postural hypotension is uncommon, linked to rare sympathetic disruption (e.g., Horner's syndrome), resolving typically. Headaches occur but aren't persistent. The low incidence of sustained hypotension reflects PCC's targeted spinothalamic focus, sparing autonomic pathways, making it a safer palliative option versus historical benchmarks.
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