The hospice nurse is admitting a client. Which question concerning end-of-life care is most important for the nurse to discuss with the client and family?
- A. Encourage the client and family to make funeral arrangements.
- B. Assess the client's pain medication regimen for effectiveness.
- C. Determine if the client has made an advance directive or living will.
- D. Ask what durable medical equipment is in place in the home.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Determining AD or living will status guides end-of-life care decisions, a hospice priority. Funeral plans, pain regimens, or equipment are secondary.
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The hospice care nurse is conducting a spiritual care assessment. Which statement is the scientific rationale for this intervention?
- A. The client will ask all of his or her spiritual questions and get answers.
- B. The nurse is able to explain to the client how death will affect the spirit.
- C. Spirituality provides a sense of meaning and purpose for many clients.
- D. The nurse is the expert when assisting the client with spiritual matters.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Spirituality offers meaning and purpose, supporting holistic hospice care. Clients may not ask all questions, nurses aren’t spiritual experts, and death’s spiritual impact is subjective.
The nurse is caring for a client who received a kidney transplant from an unrelated cadaver donor. Which interventions should be included in the plan of care? Select all that apply.
- A. Collect a urine culture every other day.
- B. Prepare the client for dialysis three (3) times a week.
- C. Monitor urine osmolality studies.
- D. Monitor intake and output every shift.
- E. Check abdominal dressing every four (4) hours.
Correct Answer: C,D,E
Rationale: Monitoring urine osmolality, intake/output, and dressings detects rejection or complications post-kidney transplant. Routine urine cultures or dialysis are unnecessary unless indicated.
The client diagnosed with cancer is experiencing severe pain. Which regimen would the nurse teach the client about to control the pain?
- A. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) around the clock with narcotics used for severe pain.
- B. Morphine sustained release, a narcotic, routinely with a liquid morphine preparation for breakthrough pain.
- C. Extra-Strength Tylenol, a nonnarcotic analgesic, plus therapy to learn alternative methods of pain control.
- D. Demerol, an opioid narcotic, every six (6) hours orally with a suppository when the pain is not controlled.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Sustained-release morphine with breakthrough doses is standard for cancer pain, per WHO pain ladder. NSAIDs, Tylenol, or Demerol regimens are less effective or outdated.
The hospice care nurse is planning the care of an elderly client diagnosed with end-stage renal disease. Which interventions should be included in the plan of care? Select all that apply.
- A. Discuss financial concerns.
- B. Assess any comorbid conditions.
- C. Monitor increased visual or auditory abilities.
- D. Note any spiritual distress.
- E. Encourage euphoria at the time of death.
Correct Answer: A,B,D
Rationale: Financial concerns, comorbidities, and spiritual distress are relevant for holistic hospice care in end-stage renal disease. Visual/auditory increases or euphoria are not typical interventions.
The male client who has made himself a do not resuscitate (DNR) order is in pain. The client's vital signs are P 88, R 8, and BP 108/70. Which intervention should be the nurse's priority action?
- A. Refuse to give the medication because it could kill the client.
- B. Administer the medication as ordered and assess for relief from pain.
- C. Wait until the client' respirations improve and then administer the medication.
- D. Notify the HCP the client is unstable and pain medication is being held.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Pain relief is a priority, even with DNR; administering medication as ordered with assessment is safe, despite low respirations. Refusing, delaying, or notifying HCP delays care.