Patient was administered a stat insulin dose
The nurse administered the stat insulin dose as ordered, in the presence of the nurse's aide and the dietary aide, however, the nurse failed to chart the medication on the MAR. During a legal deposition regarding charges of professional malpractice, it was determined that:
- A. the insulin was administered based per the nurse's testimony
- B. none of the answers are correct
- C. the insulin was administered based on the witness testimony
- D. the insulin was not administered because it was not charted
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Legally, 'if it wasn't documented, it wasn't done' (D). Without MAR documentation, the insulin administration cannot be verified, despite testimony (A, C). B is incorrect as D is accurate.
You may also like to solve these questions
When using the SOAP method of charting, S stands for subjective data which means:
- A. patient provided data
- B. all of the answers are correct
- C. observed data
- D. measured data
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Subjective data (A) includes patient-reported information like pain or symptoms. Observed (C) and measured (D) data are objective, and B is incorrect as only A is accurate.
Patient with edema has a problem of fluid overload
A patient with edema has a problem of fluid overload. The nurse is developing a care plan and selecting interventions that will assist the patient in reducing the fluid. An important consideration when developing the care plan is to:
- A. use a Nursing Diagnosis from a source other than NANDA-I
- B. limit the number of interventions
- C. select interventions which will be easy to implement
- D. involve the patient in the process
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Involving the patient in the care plan (D) ensures better adherence and personalization, which is critical for effective fluid reduction. A is incorrect because NANDA-I provides standardized diagnoses for accuracy. B is incorrect as interventions should be sufficient, not arbitrarily limited. C is incorrect because interventions should be effective, not merely easy.
When discovering subjective data, recognize that they relate to:
- A. signs
- B. objective cues
- C. symptoms
- D. observable data
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Subjective data relates to symptoms (C) reported by the patient, like pain or nausea. Signs (A), objective cues (B), and observable data (D) are objective, measurable findings.
Patient walks with a limp; Patient reports pain level as 3 on a scale of 1 to 10; Coughed up 5 mL yellow sputum; Headache in frontal area
The nurse is documenting patient data. Which of the following should the nurse document under objective data? (select all that apply)
- A. Assistive personnel reports the patient walks with a limp
- B. Patient reports pain level as 3 on a scale of 1 to 10
- C. Heart rate 72 beats per minute
- D. Respiratory rate 22 per minute with even unlabored respirations
- E. Coughed up 5 mL yellow sputum
- F. Headache in frontal area
Correct Answer: C,D,E
Rationale: C: Heart rate is measured, making it objective. D: Respiratory rate is observed and quantified, thus objective. E: Sputum volume and color are observable, hence objective. A is secondhand, B and F are subjective patient reports.
On what form/forms should the nurse chart when administering a narcotic?
- A. Physician's Order Sheet
- B. Narcotic Administration Sheet
- C. Care Plan
- D. MAR and Narcotic Administration Sheet
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Narcotics are documented on both the MAR (Medication Administration Record) (D) for all medications and the Narcotic Administration Sheet for controlled substances to ensure tracking and compliance. A, B alone, and C are incorrect.
Nokea