The nurse is administering a cleansing enema to a client the night before bowel surgery. When administering the enema, the client reports cramping and pain. Which of the following actions should the nurse take?
- A. Slowly raise the height of the solution container
- B. Tell the client that the process will not take much longer
- C. Temporarily stop instilling the solution, then resume at a slower rate
- D. Withdraw the tube approximately 2 cm and continue the instillation
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Pausing and slowing the flow reduces cramping by allowing the bowel to adjust. Raising the container increases pressure, reassurance doesn't address pain, and withdrawing the tube is unnecessary.
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The nurse is contributing to a staff education program about cancer screening. Which of the following findings should the nurse suggest including as a possible warning sign of cancer?
- A. recent diagnosis of benign prostatic hyperplasia
- B. unintentional weight loss of 15 lb (6.8 kg) over the past 3 months
- C. a doughy, mobile, golf ball-sized lesion under the skin on the thigh
- D. a fever, productive cough, and hoarseness for the past 5 days
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Unintentional weight loss is a cancer warning sign. BPH is benign, a mobile lesion is likely benign, and cough/fever suggest infection.
An elderly client is severely dehydrated. Which is the best way to assess the effectiveness of fluid restoration therapy?
- A. Assess the client's skin turgor every shift.
- B. Record weights daily.
- C. Ask the client if she is thirsty.
- D. Record all intake.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Daily weights provide an objective measure of fluid restoration, as 1 kg approximates 1 L of fluid. Skin turgor is less reliable in elders, thirst is subjective, and intake alone doesn't confirm absorption.
An adult is admitted with a pneumothorax following an accident. Immediately after insertion of a chest tube, the client says to the nurse, 'Why do I have a tube in my chest and that thing hanging on the side of the bed? I don't like it.' What should the nurse include when replying to the client?
- A. Tell the client that the chest tube helps the client take bigger breaths
- B. Focus on the client's feelings
- C. Explain that the chest tube will remove air and/or fluid from the pleural cavity and allow the lung to reexpand
- D. Tell the client that the nurse will contact the physician to have it removed
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The chest tube drains air/fluid from the pleural space, allowing lung re-expansion in pneumothorax, providing an accurate, educational response to the client's question.
The clinic nurse is interviewing the parents of a 6-month-old client about the infant's diet. Which statement by the parents is most concerning?
- A. Because apples are healthy, we make apple pie and feed small, soft bites to our baby.
- B. If our baby refuses to finish foods, we continue to offer small bites, so food isn't wasted.
- C. Infant oatmeal sweetened with fresh honey is our baby's favorite breakfast.
- D. We found that the food in TV dinners can be easily pureed and is convenient.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Honey poses a botulism risk in infants under 1 year, making it the most concerning. Apple pie and TV dinners are inappropriate but less dangerous, and offering bites is not harmful.
The nurse is observing a staff member caring for a client who had a vaginal birth 30 minutes ago. The client is having difficulty with breastfeeding and is requesting assistance. The nurse should intervene if the staff member is observed
- A. providing supplemental formula feedings until improved breastfeeding occurs
- B. checking the newborn's position and sucking behavior during breastfeeding
- C. demonstrating to the client how to express breastmilk using the hand
- D. providing information on recognizing newborn hunger cues
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Supplemental formula may undermine breastfeeding efforts early on. Checking position , demonstrating expression , and teaching hunger cues support breastfeeding.
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